SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
                Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
              Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.____)

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Check the appropriate box:

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/  /     Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only  (as permitted by
         Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
/X/      Definitive Proxy Statement
/  /     Definitive Additional Materials
/  /     Soliciting Material Under Rule 14a-12

                                  I-TRAX, INC.
  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

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         0-11.

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                                     [LOGO]

                                  I-TRAX, INC.
                          One Logan Square, Suite 2615
                               130 N. 18th Street
                             Philadelphia, PA 19103






                                                              April 26, 2002



Dear I-trax, Inc. Stockholders:

         You are cordially  invited to the Annual Meeting of  Stockholders to be
held  at  10:00  A.M.  on May  22,  2002  at 1735  Market  Street,  51st  Floor,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103.

         Details  with  respect  to the  meeting  are set forth in the  attached
Notice of Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement.

         Your vote is important.  Whether or not you plan to attend the meeting,
you are urged to complete,  date,  sign and return your proxy. If you attend the
meeting and would prefer to vote in person, you may still do so.


                                        Very truly yours,

                                        /s/ FRANK A. MARTIN
                                        FRANK A. MARTIN
                                        Chairman and Chief Executive Officer



                                  I-TRAX, INC.

               --------------------------------------------------

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                             To Be Held May 22, 2002

               --------------------------------------------------

To the Stockholders:

      The Annual Meeting of  Stockholders  of I-trax,  Inc. will be held at 1735
Market Street,  51st Floor,  Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania 19103, at 10:00 A.M. on
May 22, 2002 for the following purposes:

      (1)   To elect eleven directors to serve one-year terms.

      (2)   To  consider  and  vote  upon a  proposal  to  amend  the  Company's
            Certificate  of  Incorporation  to effect a reverse stock split,  as
            determined  by the Board of  Directors in its  discretion,  so as to
            comply with the listing requirements of the American Stock Exchange.

      (3)   To ratify the  selection  by the Board of  Directors  of the firm of
            PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as independent auditors for 2002.

      (4)   To transact any other  business  that may  properly  come before the
            meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof.

      Stockholders  of record as of the close of  business  on April 2, 2002 are
entitled to notice of and to vote at the meeting.

      Whether or not you plan to attend the meeting,  please complete,  date and
sign the enclosed proxy card and return it in the enclosed envelope.  Your proxy
may be revoked at any time prior to the time it is voted.


                                            By Order of the Board of Directors,

                                            /s/ YURI ROZENFELD
                                            YURI ROZENFELD
                                            General Counsel and Secretary

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
April 26, 2002



                                  I-TRAX, INC.
                          One Logan Square, Suite 2615
                               130 N. 18th Street
                             Philadelphia, PA 19103

                      -------------------------------------

                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                       FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                      -------------------------------------

      These proxy materials are furnished in connection with the solicitation of
proxies by the Board of  Directors  of  I-trax,  Inc.,  a  Delaware  corporation
("I-trax" or the "Company"), for the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of I-trax to
be held at 10:00 A.M.  on May 22,  2002,  at 1735  Market  Street,  51st  Floor,
Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania  19103, and any adjournments or postponements of the
Annual  Meeting.  These proxy  materials were first mailed to stockholders on or
about April 26, 2002. The address of the principal executive office of I-trax is
One Logan Square,  Suite 2615,  130 N. 18th Street,  Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania
19103.  Sending a signed proxy will not affect the stockholder's right to attend
the Annual Meeting and vote in person. Every stockholder has the power to revoke
his or her  proxy at any time  before  it is  voted.  The  proxy,  before  it is
exercised  at the  meeting,  may be revoked by filing with the  Secretary of the
Company a notice in writing  revoking it, by  delivering a duly  executed  proxy
bearing a later date, or by attending the meeting and voting in person.

Stockholders Entitled to Vote

      The  close  of  business  of  April  2,  2002  was  the  record  date  for
stockholders  entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting. As of the
record date, there were 46,358,856 outstanding shares of the common stock, $.001
par value (the "Common Stock"), of I-trax.

Quorum Required

      The presence,  in person or by proxy, of stockholders  entitled to cast at
least a majority of the votes that all  stockholders  are  entitled to cast on a
particular  issue  constitutes a quorum for the  transaction  of business at the
Annual Meeting.  Abstentions and broker non-votes will be counted as present for
the purpose of determining the presence of a quorum.

Votes Required

      Proposal 1. Directors are elected by a plurality of the affirmative  votes
cast by those shares present in person, or represented by proxy, and entitled to
vote at the Annual Meeting.  The eleven (11) nominees for director receiving the
highest  number of  affirmative  votes will be elected.  Abstentions  and broker
non-votes will not be counted  toward a nominee's  total.  Stockholders  may not
cumulate votes in the election of directors.

      Proposals 2, 3 and 4. Approval of the  alternative  proposals to amend the
Company's Certificate of Incorporation  requires the affirmative vote of holders
of a majority of the shares of Common Stock issued and  outstanding and entitled
to  vote  at the  Annual  Meeting.  Abstentions  and  broker  non-votes  are not
affirmative votes and, therefore, will have the same effect as votes against the
proposal.

      Proposal 5. Ratification of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP
as the Company's  independent  auditors for the fiscal year ending  December 31,
2002  requires the  affirmative  vote of a majority of those  shares  present in
person, or represented by proxy, and cast either  affirmatively or negatively at
the Annual  Meeting.  Abstentions  and broker  non-votes  will not be counted as
having been voted on the proposal.

                                       1




Proxies

      A form of proxy is enclosed. All properly executed proxies received by the
Board of  Directors,  and not revoked,  will be voted as indicated in accordance
with the  instructions  written  on the  proxies.  In the  absence  of  contrary
instructions,  shares  represented  by  returned  proxies  will be voted for the
election of the directors as described in this Proxy Statement; in favor of each
alternate proposal to amend the Company's Certificate of Incorporation; in favor
of the  ratification  of the selection of the independent  auditors;  and in the
discretion of the proxy holders, on any other matter as may properly come before
the meeting.

Solicitation of Proxies

      The entire cost of soliciting proxies will be borne by I-trax. I-trax will
arrange with brokerage houses and other custodians,  nominees and fiduciaries to
send proxies and proxy materials to the beneficial  owners of Common Stock,  and
may reimburse these persons or institutions for expenses  incurred in connection
with this  distribution.  Proxies may be  solicited  in person or by  telephone,
facsimile, e-mail, telegraph or other means by directors,  officers or employees
of I-trax, none of whom will receive additional compensation for doing this.


                                 PROPOSAL NO. 1
                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

      The Board of Directors currently consists of eleven directors.  All eleven
directors are to be elected at the Annual Meeting to serve until the 2003 Annual
Meeting.  The Board's nominees for election as directors are John Blazek,  David
R. Bock, Philip D. Green,  Michael M.E. Johns,  M.D., Craig Jones, M.D., Hans C.
Kastensmith,  Arthur N. Leibowitz, M.D., Frank A. Martin, John R. Palumbo, Carol
Rehtmeyer,  Ph.D., and William S. Wheeler,  each of whom currently serves on the
Board.

      The proxy  holders  intend  to vote all  proxies  received  by them in the
accompanying form for these nominees unless otherwise directed. In the event any
nominee is unable or  declines  to serve as a director at the time of the Annual
Meeting,  the proxies will be voted for any nominee who may be designated by the
present  Board of  Directors to fill the vacancy,  or, in the  alternative,  the
Board  may  reduce  the  number  of  directors.  As of the  date of  this  Proxy
Statement, the Company is not aware of any nominee who is unable or unwilling to
serve as a director.

      The  following  table lists the name and age, as of April 2, 2002, of each
Board nominee to serve as a director of the Company.



                 Name                     Age                              Position
-------------------------------    ---------------    ----------------------------------------------------

                                                
Frank A. Martin                           51          Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, Treasurer and
                                                          Director
John Blazek                               47          Member of the Office of the President and Director
David R. Bock                             58          Director
Philip D. Green                           51          Director
Michael M.E. Johns, M.D.                  60          Director
Craig Jones, M.D.                         43          Director
Hans C. Kastensmith                       42          Vice-Chairman and Director
Arthur N. Leibowitz, M.D.                 55          Director
John R. Palumbo                           51          Director
Carol Rehtmeyer, Ph.D.                    52          Member of the Office of the President and Director
William S. Wheeler                        45          Director



                                       2



      Frank A. Martin has been a director,  Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
of I-trax since  September 2000. Mr. Martin has been a director of I-trax Health
Management  Solutions,   Inc.  ("Health  Management"),   one  of  the  Company's
predecessors  and currently its wholly owned operating  subsidiary,  since 1996.
Mr. Martin founded,  and has been a Managing  Director of, The Nantucket  Group,
LLC ("Nantucket"),  a health care venture capital firm specializing in investing
in early stage healthcare service and technology  companies since December 1998.
He  currently  serves  on  the  Board  of  Directors  of  Saddletude,  Inc.,  an
Internet-based  equestrian  sports  network.  Mr.  Martin  served  as the  Chief
Executive  Officer and director of  EduNeering,  Inc., an  electronic  knowledge
management company,  from April 1999 to April 2000. In November 1992, Mr. Martin
founded Physician  Dispensing  Systems,  Inc. ("PDS"), a health care information
technology  company  that  developed  pharmaceutical  software  for  physicians'
offices.  Mr.  Martin  assisted  in the  sale  of PDS to  Allscripts  Healthcare
Solutions,  Inc.  ("Allscripts"),  a  provider  of  point-of-care  solutions  to
physicians,  in  December  1996 and  joined its Board of  Directors  on which he
served until 1998.

      John Blazek, MBA, RPh, has been a director and Member of the Office of the
President of I-trax since  February  2002.  Mr. Blazek joined I-trax when I-trax
acquired WellComm Group, Inc.  ("WellComm"),  a disease management  company,  in
February  2002.  From May 2000 to February  2002, Mr. Blazek served as the Chief
Executive  Officer  of  WellComm.  From 1998 to 1999,  Mr.  Blazek  served as an
Assistant  to Mayor  Hal Daub,  City of  Omaha,  in which  capacity  he  oversaw
economic development for the City of Omaha. From 1996 to 1999, Mr. Blazek served
as President of Blazek &  Associates,  Inc., a consulting  firm.  Mr. Blazek was
co-owner of a company  that was twice named  among  Omaha's "25 fastest  growing
companies" before it was sold to Coram Healthcare in 1992.

      David R. Bock has been a director of I-trax since  February 2001. Mr. Bock
was a director of Health  Management  from February 2000 to February  2001.  Mr.
Bock has been the  Executive  Vice  President  and Chief  Financial  Officer  of
Pedestal, Inc., an Internet-based company providing information on the secondary
mortgage marketplace, since January 2000. Prior to that, Mr. Bock was a managing
partner in Federal  City  Capital  Advisors,  LLC,  an  investment-banking  firm
located in Washington,  D.C. Mr. Bock is also a Managing  Director of Nantucket.
From 1992 to 1995,  Mr.  Bock was a Managing  Director  in the London  corporate
finance  group of Lehman  Brothers and was  responsible  for  developing  Lehman
Brothers'  investment  banking  business  in a wide range of  emerging  markets,
including India,  Russia,  Turkey and Central Europe.  Mr. Bock also served in a
variety of management  positions at the World Bank,  including as Chief of Staff
for the Bank's worldwide lending operations. From 1995 to 1997, he was President
of  Maitland-Ruick  & Company,  a predecessor firm to Federal City. Mr. Bock has
extensive experience in economic policy,  capital markets and corporate strategy
across a wide range of sectors, including financial services,  healthcare,  real
estate, energy and natural resources.

      Philip D. Green has been a director of I-trax  since  February  2001.  Mr.
Green was a director  of Health  Management  from March 2000 to  February  2001.
Since July 2000, Mr. Green has been a partner of Akin,  Gump,  Strauss,  Hauer &
Feld, L.L.P., a leading international law firm. From its formation in 1989 until
it merged with Akin Gump in July 2000,  Mr. Green was the founding  principal of
the Washington,  D.C. based law firm of Green, Stewart,  Farber & Anderson, P.C.
From 1978 through 1989,  Mr. Green was a partner in the  Washington,  D.C. based
law firm of Schwalb,  Donnenfeld,  Bray and Silbert,  P.C.  Mr. Green  practices
healthcare law and assists entities in corporate planning and transactions.  Mr.
Green represents a significant number of major teaching hospitals and integrated
healthcare  delivery  systems.  Mr. Green also represents a number of public and
private for-profit healthcare companies.  Mr. Green is currently a member of the
Board of  Directors  of  Allscripts  and Imagyn  Medical  Technologies,  Inc., a
medical device manufacturer.

      Michael M.E.  Johns,  M.D.,  has been a director of I-trax since  February
2001.  Dr.  Johns was a  director  of Health  Management  from  October  2000 to
February  2001.  Since 1996, Dr. Johns has served as an Executive Vice President
for Health Affairs of Emory University, overseeing Emory University's widespread
academic and clinical programs in health sciences.  In this position,  Dr. Johns
leads  strategic  planning  initiatives  for both patient care and research.  In
addition,  since  1996,  Dr.  Johns has served as the  Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer of Emory Healthcare,  a comprehensive  healthcare system
in metropolitan  Atlanta.  Emory  Healthcare  includes two physician  practices,
three wholly owned  hospitals  and a jointly owned fourth  hospital,  as well as
numerous affiliated  hospitals in Atlanta and throughout Georgia. Dr. Johns also
is  Chairman  of the Board of EHCA,  LLC,  a company  overseen  jointly by Emory
Healthcare and HCA Corporation.  Through EHCA, Emory is responsible for clinical
performance  improvement  and quality  assurance in six local hospitals and five
surgery centers owned by HCA

                                       3



Corporation.  From  1990 to 1996,  Dr.  Johns  served  as the Dean of the  Johns
Hopkins  School of Medicine and Vice  President of the Medical  Faculty at Johns
Hopkins University.

      Craig A. Jones,  M.D.,  has been a director of I-trax since February 2001.
Dr.  Jones was a director of Health  Management  from  January  2000 to February
2001.  Dr. Jones is  currently  Director of the Division of Allergy & Immunology
and the  Allergy &  Immunology  Residency  Training  Program at the Los  Angeles
County and  University of Southern  California  Medical  Center and an Assistant
Professor of  Pediatrics  at the  University  of Southern  California  School of
Medicine.  Since  November  1996,  Dr.  Jones  has  served  as  Director  of the
Breathmobile  Mobile Asthma  Clinic  Program,  a program that he developed.  The
Company's  AsthmaWatch(R)  system  is  currently  installed  and  in  use in the
Breathmobiles. Because of its clinical impact, the program is serving as a model
for community-based  preventive healthcare and disease management.  From January
1997 to December 1997, Dr. Jones served as President of the Los Angeles  Society
of Asthma, Allergy & Immunology.  Currently,  he is designing and implementing a
program  for the  Los  Angeles  County  Department  of  Health  Services,  which
integrates  clinical  operations and patient flow in four Breathmobiles  serving
more than eighty-five school sites,  County  Comprehensive  Health Centers,  and
Pediatric Services at the LAC+USC Medical Center.

      Hans C.  Kastensmith has been a director of I-trax since February 2001 and
Vice-Chairman  of I-trax since March 2001.  Mr.  Kastensmith  was a director and
President  of Health  Management  from  September  1999 to  February  2001.  Mr.
Kastensmith  founded  Member-Link  Systems,  Inc.  ("Member-Link"),   a  company
acquired by Health  Management in 1999. Mr.  Kastensmith  formed  Member-Link in
1992 and  served as its Chief  Executive  Officer  until it merged  with  Health
Management.  Mr. Kastensmith is currently leading a business  development effort
for Medical  Archival  Systems at the  University of Pittsburgh  Medical  Center
Health System.

      Arthur  (Abbie) N.  Leibowitz,  M.D.,  FAAP, has been a director of I-trax
since  March  2002.  Since  2001,  Dr.  Leibowitz  has been the  Executive  Vice
President for Business Development and Chief Medical Officer of Health Advocate,
a health services company, which he helped form. Health Advocate helps consumers
navigate the healthcare  system. In 2000, Dr. Leibowitz served as Executive Vice
President for Digital Health  Strategy and Business  Development and director of
Medscape,  Inc., a clinical  information  company.  Dr.  Leibowitz's  experience
includes his tenure at Aetna U.S.  Healthcare  from 1987 to 2000 where he served
in several senior positions, including as Aetna's Chief Medical Officer for over
four years. As Aetna's Chief Medical  Officer,  he was responsible for directing
the company's patient management and clinical  activities and relationships with
numerous physicians, hospitals and other heathcare providers. Dr. Leibowitz is a
nationally  recognized  leader in the  healthcare  industry  and an authority on
managed care, clinical management and medical information  systems. He is also a
popular speaker and has appeared  frequently on national and regional television
and radio.

      John R. Palumbo has been a director of I-trax  since  February  2001.  Mr.
Palumbo was a director of Health  Management  from March 2000 to February  2001.
Mr.  Palumbo  has been a Vice  President  of Siemens  Medical  Solutions  Health
Services, a provider of solutions and services for integrated healthcare,  since
July 2001.  From 1996 until it was acquired by Siemens,  Mr.  Palumbo  served as
Area Vice President of Shared Medical Systems Corporation, a worldwide leader of
health information  solutions serving over 5,000 providers in the United States,
Europe and the Pacific Rim. At Shared Medical  Systems,  Mr. Palumbo oversaw the
start-up of the National Health Services division, which markets to and services
the for-profit and not-for profit national health systems,  such as Tenant, UHS,
and Ascension,  and in 1999 assumed additional  responsibilities for the Western
Operations division.  From 1995 to 1996, Mr. Palumbo served as an Executive Vice
President and Chief  Operating  Officer of  Allscripts.  From 1990 to 1995,  Mr.
Palumbo was the  Executive  Vice  President  of  Healthworks  Alliance,  Inc., a
company he founded  specializing in point-of-care  technology and  reengineering
services allowing physicians to process patients through the healthcare delivery
system.

      Carol M. Rehtmeyer,  Ph.D., MSN, RN, has been a director and Member of the
Office of the President of I-trax since  February  2002.  Ms.  Rehtmeyer  joined
I-trax when I-trax  acquired  WellComm in February  2002. Ms.  Rehtmeyer  formed
WellComm in 1997 after determining there was a need in healthcare for clinically
based, customer oriented telehealth  information services.  Ms. Rehtmeyer served
as the  President  of WellComm  from its  formation  until  February  2002.  Ms.
Rehtmeyer has more than twenty-five  years of healthcare  experience in areas of
practice  teaching,  administration  and leadership in clinical and managed care
settings.

                                       4



      William S. Wheeler has been a director of I-trax since  February 2001. Mr.
Wheeler  was a director of Health  Management  from  September  1999 to February
2001.  Mr.  Wheeler has been the Chief  Operating  Officer  and Chief  Financial
Officer of Net2Voice,  a  telecommunications  company,  since March 2001. In May
1999,  Mr.  Wheeler  co-founded  an Internet  communications  business  that was
launched in April 2000. Mr. Wheeler was a Vice President at Cable & Wireless USA
from June 1989 until  February  1999.  During this period,  Mr. Wheeler held the
positions of Vice President and Controller,  Senior Vice President,  Finance and
acting President of the Dial Internet Services division.  While leading the Dial
Internet  Services  division,  Mr. Wheeler  oversaw aspects of Cable & Wireless'
acquisition of MCI's Internet business.  In this capacity,  Mr. Wheeler had full
responsibility  for  marketing,  finance,  a  customer  service  center  and all
operational  support  systems.  He developed a marketing and  financial  plan to
increase the customer base and improve  profitability in a very short time frame
and  directed  the  launch of Cable & Wireless  USA's  first  consumer  Internet
service (www.cwix.com). The business was sold to Prodigy Internet in 1999.

Board of Directors Meetings and Committees

      The Board of  Directors  of I-trax  held a total of five  meetings  during
2001.  Each director who served in 2001,  other than Dr. Jones and Mr.  Palumbo,
attended  more than 75% of the meetings of the Board and any  committee of which
he is a member.

      The  Board  of  Directors  has  a  Compensation  Committee  and  an  Audit
Committee.

      The  Compensation  Committee is primarily  responsible for determining the
compensation  payable to the  officers  and key  employees of the Company and to
recommend to the Board additions,  deletions and alterations with respect to the
various  employee  benefit  plans  and other  fringe  benefits  provided  by the
Company,  except  that no member of the  Committee  takes  part in any  decision
pertaining to his  compensation or benefits in his capacity as a director of the
Company.  The Committee  also is primarily  responsible  for  administering  the
Company's  stock option  plans,  awarding  stock  options to the  Company's  key
employees and non-employee directors and determining the terms and conditions on
which the options are granted.  The Committee,  which currently  consists of Dr.
Jones and Mr. Bock, held no separate meetings during 2001.  Rather,  the members
of the Committee  participated  in all Board  meetings  concerning  compensation
issues and had  recommended  a course of action  with  respect  to  compensation
matters to the Board at those meetings.

      The Audit  Committee is primarily  responsible  for approving the services
performed by the Company's independent auditors and reviewing and evaluating the
Company's accounting principles and reporting practices.  The Audit Committee is
also  responsible  for  monitoring the Company's  system of internal  accounting
controls  and has the  responsibility  and  authority  described in its charter,
which is attached  as Exhibit A. This  Committee  currently  consists of Messrs.
Wheeler, as Chairman,  Palumbo and Bock. The Committee held one separate meeting
in 2001 to review the  Company's  2000  financial  statements  and one  separate
meeting in 2002 to review the Company's  2001 financial  statements.  All of the
members of the Audit  Committee  are  independent,  as  defined by the  National
Association of Securities Dealers listing standards.

Compensation of Directors

      During 2001,  directors of the Company did not receive any cash  payments.
Messrs. Green and Palumbo and Dr. Johns each received an option grant of 100,000
shares and Mr. Wheeler  received an option grant of 50,000 shares.  These option
grants  are  exercisable  over a period  of two  years.  Each  director  is also
reimbursed  for  out-of-pocket  expenses  incurred in connection  with attending
Board meetings.

RECOMMENDATION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

      THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE NOMINEES LISTED IN THIS
PROXY STATEMENT.

                                       5



                            PROPOSALS NO. 2, 3 AND 4
      ALTERNATIVE AMENDMENTS TO THE COMPANY'S CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
                         TO EFFECT A REVERSE STOCK SPLIT

         The Board of Directors has determined  that it is in the best interests
of the  Company  and its  stockholders  to  effect  one of the  three  following
alternative reverse stock split transactions:

      o     a reverse 1-for-3 stock split;

      o     a reverse 1-for-4 stock split; and

      o     a reverse 1-for-5 stock split.

      In the discussion that follows, the term "Minimum Number" means: 3, if the
1-for-3  reverse  split  is  implemented;  4, if the  1-for-4  reverse  split is
implemented; and 5, if the 1-for-5 reverse split is implemented.

      Each of these three alternative transactions is a reverse stock split (the
"Reverse Split") pursuant to which each Minimum Number of shares of Common Stock
registered  in the name of a stockholder  at the  effective  time of the Reverse
Split will be  converted  into one share of Common  Stock.  As  permitted  under
Delaware law,  shares of Common Stock that would be converted into less than one
share in the Reverse Split will instead be converted into the right to receive a
cash payment as further described below.

      The Company is  submitting  the  separate  proposals  to approve the three
alternative  Reverse Split transactions in connection with the Company's pending
application  for listing of its Common Stock for trading on the  American  Stock
Exchange.  The  Board  believes  that  one  of  the  alternative  Reverse  Split
transactions  will be required to increase the trading price of the Common Stock
to more  than $3 and  thus  satisfy  an  important  listing  requirement  of the
American Stock Exchange.  The Board is soliciting  stockholder approval for each
of three  alternative  Reverse Split  transactions.  The  availability  of three
alternatives  will  provide  the Board with the  flexibility  to  implement  the
Reverse  Split  transaction  that may be required to satisfy the American  Stock
Exchange's minimum stock price requirement.

      If each of the three alternative  Reverse Split  transactions are approved
by the requisite vote of the  stockholders,  the Board, in its  discretion,  may
elect  to  effect  any  one  (but  not  more  than  one)  of  three  alternative
transactions.  Prior to  exercising  this  discretion,  the  Company  will  seek
reasonable  assurances that its application for listing Common Stock for trading
on the American Stock Exchange has been approved  pending the  effectiveness  of
applicable  Reverse Split  transaction  and will consult with the American Stock
Exchange  regarding which of the three  alternative  Reverse Split  transactions
will  be  appropriate  in  light  of  the  America  Stock   Exchange's   listing
qualifications and the Company's then stock price. Ultimately,  however, even if
approved by the stockholders, the Board will have the discretion to determine if
and when to effect any of these  transactions  and reserves the right to abandon
any or all of these  transactions,  but  only if the  Board  concludes  that the
Common Stock should not be listed on the American Stock Exchange.

      We expect that if stockholders approve, and the Board elects to implement,
the Reverse  Split,  the Company is likely be consummate the Reverse Split on or
about the date on which the Company's application to the American Stock Exchange
is approved. If the Board determines to implement any of the alternative Reverse
Split transactions  approved by the stockholders,  before the Reverse Split goes
into  effect,  I-trax  will  issue  a  press  release  announcing  which  of the
alternative  Reverse Split transactions the Board has elected to effect and post
it on its website at http://www.i-trax.com. The Company will abandon the Reverse
Split transaction if the Company's application to the American Stock Exchange is
not  approved  within  nine  months of the 2002  Annual  Meeting or if the Board
concludes  that the  Common  Stock  should not be listed on the  American  Stock
Exchange.

      If approved by the  stockholders and implemented by the Board, the Reverse
Split will become effective on the date selected by the Board upon the filing of
the  necessary  amendment  to I-trax's  Certificate  of  Incorporation  with the
Secretary of State of the State of Delaware (the "Effective  Date"). The form of
proposed amendment to I-trax's Certificate of Incorporation  necessary to effect
the  Reverse  Split is  attached  to this  Proxy  Statement  as  Exhibit  B. The
highlights of the Reverse Split are as follows.

                                       6




Effect On Stockholders

      If approved by  stockholders  at the Annual Meeting and implemented by the
Board, the Reverse Split will affect I-trax stockholders as follows:



   Stockholders Before Completion of the
               Reverse  Split                                Net Effect After Completion of the Reverse Split
--------------------------------------------------    ---------------------------------------------------------------

                                                   
Registered stockholders holding the Minimum           Any shares that would result in the registered holders
number or more shares of Common Stock.                receiving a fraction of a share after the completion of the
                                                      Reverse Stock Split will be converted into the right to
                                                      receive cash.

Registered stockholders holding fewer than the        Shares will be converted into the right to receive cash.
Minimum Number of shares of Common Stock.

Stockholders holding Common Stock in street name      I-trax intends that the holders of Common Stock in nominee
through a nominee (such as a bank or broker).         accounts (such as through a bank or a broker) will experience
                                                      the same offer of the Reverse Split as the stockholders
                                                      whose shares are registered in their names. Nominees will be
                                                      instructed to effect the Reverse Split for their beneficial
                                                      holders. However, nominees may have different procedures and
                                                      stockholders holding shares in street name should contact
                                                      their nominees.


Structure of the Reverse Stock Split

      If one of the three alternative  Reverse Split transactions is approved by
stockholders  and  implemented  by the Board,  the Reverse  Split is expected to
occur at 6:00 p.m.  on the  Effective  Date.  Upon  consummation  of the Reverse
Split, each registered  stockholder on the Effective Date will receive one share
of Common Stock for each Minimum Number of shares of Common Stock held in his or
her account at that time. If a registered  stockholder  holds the Minimum Number
or more shares of Common Stock in his or her account,  any  fractional  share in
such account will be cashed out after the Reverse  Split and the total number of
shares held by the holder will be equal to the whole  number of shares after the
Reverse Split less any fractional  share.  Any registered  stockholder who holds
fewer than the Minimum Number of shares of Common Stock in his or her account at
the  time  of the  Reverse  Split  will  receive  a cash  payment  instead  of a
fractional  share. We describe how we will calculate the payment we will make on
account of fractional shares below. We intend that a holder of Common Stock in a
nominee  account (such as through a bank or a broker) will  experience  the same
offer of the Reverse Split as the stockholder whose shares are registered in his
or her name.  Nominees  will be instructed to effect the Reverse Split for their
beneficial  holders.  However,  nominees may have  different  procedures,  and a
stockholder holding shares in street name should contact his or her nominee.

      In  general,  the  Reverse  Split  can be  illustrated  by  the  following
examples:


                                                  
Mr. Smith is a registered holder of 2 shares of       After the Effective Date, Mr. Smith will receive a cash
Common Stock.                                         payment equal to the cash-out price for his Common Stock.  We
                                                      explain how we calculate the cash-out price below.  Assuming
                                                      a cash-out price of $1, Mr. Smith will receive a check for
                                                      $2.


                                       7



Ms. Doe is a registered holder of 125 shares of       1-for-3 reverse stock split
Common Stock.
                                                      After the Effective Date, Ms. Doe will be a registered holder of
                                                      41 shares of Common Stock because this is the whole number of
                                                      shares after her 125 shares are divided by 3. Ms. Doe will also
                                                      receive a cash payment equal to the cash-out price for the 2
                                                      shares that would have resulted in a fractional share after the
                                                      Effective Date. (41x3=123 and 123+2=125) Assuming a cash-out
                                                      price of $1, Ms. Doe will receive a check for $2.

                                                      1-for-4 reverse stock split

                                                      After the Effective Date, Ms. Doe will be a registered holder of
                                                      31 shares of Common Stock because this is the whole number of
                                                      shares after her 125 shares are divided by 4. Ms. Doe will also
                                                      receive a cash payment equal to the cash-out price for the 1
                                                      share that would have resulted in a fractional share after the
                                                      Effective Date. (31x4=124 and 124+1=125) Assuming a cash-out
                                                      price of $1, Ms. Doe will receive a check for $1.

                                                      1-for-5 reverse stock split

                                                      After the Effective Date, Ms. Doe will be a registered holder of
                                                      25 shares of Common Stock because this is the whole number of
                                                      shares after her 125 shares are divided by 5. There are no
                                                      fractional shares after the Effective Date and Ms. Doe will not
                                                      receive any cash payment.



Background and Purpose of the Reverse Split

      In March 2002, the Company  applied for the listing of its Common Stock on
the American Stock  Exchange.  The Company  believes that other than meeting the
stock price requirement,  the Company's  application generally meets the listing
requirements of the American Stock  Exchange.  The Company's stock price at this
time is less than the $3 per share, which is the minimum stock price required by
the American Stock  Exchange.  As an example,  on April 3, 2002 the closing sale
price of the Common Stock on the Over-the-Counter  Bulletin Board ("OTC BB") was
$1.04,  and since January 1, 2002 and through  April 2, 2002 the Common  Stock's
closing sales price has ranged from a low of $1.02 to a high of $1.47.

      The Board of Directors  has  concluded  that it is in the best interest of
the Company and its  stockholders  to secure the listing of the Common  Stock on
the  American  Stock  Exchange and if necessary  in  connection  with  obtaining
listing,  to  effect  one of the  alternative  Reverse  Split  transactions.  In
determining  which  of the  three  alternative  Reverse  Split  transactions  to
implement,  if any, following stockholder approval, the Board will consider many
factors,  including: (1) the then prevailing trading price and trading volume of
the Common Stock and the anticipated  impact of the Reverse Split on the trading
market for the Common  Stock;  (2)  whether  the  American  Stock  Exchange  has
approved the listing of the Common Stock subject to the Reverse  Split;  (3) the
Board's  determination  as to which of the alternative  transactions  would best
satisfy the  applicable  listing  requirements  of, and  conditions  set by, the
American  Stock  Exchange;  and  (4)  prevailing  general  market  and  economic
conditions.

                                       8



Effect of the Reverse Split on I-trax Stockholders

Registered  Stockholders  with Fewer than the Minimum Number of Shares of Common
Stock:

      If we complete  the  Reverse  Split and you are a  cashed-out  stockholder
(i.e.,  a  stockholder  with fewer than the  Minimum  Number of shares of Common
Stock immediately prior to the Reverse Split):

      o     You will not receive  fractional  shares of stock as a result of the
            Reverse Split.

      o     Instead of  receiving  fractional  shares,  you will  receive a cash
            payment in lieu of your  fractional  shares in the manner  described
            below.

      o     After the Reverse Split, you will have no further interest in I-trax
            with respect to your cashed-out shares.  These shares will no longer
            entitle  you to the  right  to vote as a  stockholder  or  share  in
            I-trax's assets, earnings, or profits or in any dividends paid after
            the  Reverse  Split.  In other  words,  you will no longer hold your
            cashed-out  shares. You will have only the right to receive cash for
            these  shares.  In  addition,  you will not be  entitled  to receive
            interest for the period of time between the  Effective  Date and the
            date you receive your payment in lieu of your fractional shares.

      o     You  will  not  have  to  pay  any  service   charges  or  brokerage
            commissions in connection with the Reverse Split.

      o     As soon as  practicable  after the time we effect the Reverse Split,
            you will  receive  a  payment  for the  cashed-out  shares  you held
            immediately  prior  to the  Reverse  Split  in  accordance  with the
            procedures below.

      If You Hold Book-Entry Shares:

      o     Certain  I-trax  registered  stockholders  may hold their  shares in
            book-entry form. These  stockholders do not have stock  certificates
            evidencing  their  ownership  of Common  Stock.  They are,  however,
            provided with a statement reflecting the number of shares registered
            in their accounts.

      o     If you are a cashed-out stockholder who holds registered shares in a
            book-entry  account,  you do not need to take any  action to receive
            your cash payment.  A check will be mailed to you at your registered
            address as soon as practicable  after the Effective Date. By signing
            and cashing  this check,  you will warrant that you owned the shares
            for which you received a cash payment.

      If You Hold Certificated Shares:

      o     If  you  are a  cashed-out  stockholder  with  a  stock  certificate
            representing  your cashed-out  shares,  you will be contacted by the
            Company  or  its  transfer  agent,  StockTrans,  Inc.,  as  soon  as
            practicable   after  the  Effective  Date.  You  will  then  receive
            instructions on how to surrender your  certificate(s)  for your cash
            payment.  You will not receive your cash payment until you surrender
            your outstanding  certificate(s)  to StockTrans.  Please do not send
            your certificates  until you receive separate  instructions from the
            Company or StockTrans.

      o     All amounts owed to you will be subject to applicable federal income
            tax and state abandoned property laws.

      o     You will not receive any interest on cash  payments owed to you as a
            result of the Reverse Split.

      NOTE:  If you want to  continue  to hold  Common  Stock  after the Reverse
Split,  you may do so by purchase a sufficient  number of shares of Common Stock
so that you hold at least the Minimum  Number of shares of Common  Stock in your
account prior to the Reverse Split.

                                       9




Registered Stockholders with the Minimum Number or More Shares of Common Stock:

      If we complete  the  Reverse  Split and you would be a holder of more than
the Minimum Number of shares of Common Stock:

      o     You will not receive  fractional  shares of stock as a result of the
            Reverse Split.

      o     Instead of  receiving  fractional  shares,  you will  receive a cash
            payment in lieu of your  fractional  shares in the manner  described
            below in the Section titled "Stock Certificates."

      o     After the  Reverse  Split,  you will  have no  further  interest  in
            I-trax,  including  no right to vote or  share in  I-trax's  assets,
            earnings,  or profits  or in any  dividends  paid after the  Reverse
            Split with respect to your fractional shares. You will only have the
            right to receive cash for your fractional  shares. In addition,  you
            will not be  entitled  to  receive  interest  for the period of time
            between the Effective  Date and the date you receive your payment in
            lieu of your fractional shares.

      o     You  will  not  have  to  pay  any  service   charges  or  brokerage
            commissions in connection with the Reverse Split.

Street Name Holders of Common Stock:

      I-trax intends that the holders of Common Stock in nominee  accounts (such
as through a bank or a broker)  will  experience  the same offer of the  Reverse
Split as the stockholders  whose shares are registered in their names.  Nominees
will be  instructed to effect the Reverse  Split for their  beneficial  holders.
However,  nominees may have different procedures and stockholders holding shares
in street name should contact their nominees.

Determination of Cash-Out Price

      In order to avoid the  expense  and  inconvenience  of issuing  fractional
shares to  stockholders  who would  hold less than one share of Common  Stock or
would hold any  fraction of one share of Common  Stock after the Reverse  Split,
under  Delaware  state  law  I-trax  will pay  cash for  their  fair  value.  If
stockholders  approve  any of these  proposals  at the  Annual  Meeting  and the
Reverse Split is completed,  the cash payment with respect to each share that is
cashed out in the  Reverse  Split will be equal to an amount per share  equal to
the  average of the closing  prices per share of Common  Stock on the OTC BB for
the  period  of ten  consecutive  trading  days  ending on (and  including)  the
Effective Date, without interest.

      I-trax will obtain the funds for these payments from its working capital.

Effect of the Reverse Split On I-trax

      The Reverse  Split will not affect the  registration  of the Common  Stock
with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, as amended.

      The  number of  authorized  shares of Common  Stock  will not  change as a
result of the Reverse Split. On April 2, 2002,  there were 46,358,856  shares of
Common  Stock  issued and  outstanding.  If the Board elects to effect a 1-for-3
reverse stock split, the number of issued and outstanding shares of Common Stock
will be reduced to  approximately  15,452,952;  if the Board  elects to effect a
1-for-4  reverse  stock split,  the number of issued and  outstanding  shares of
Common  Stock  will be  reduced to  approximately  11,589,714;  and if the Board
elects  to  effect a 1-for-5  reverse  stock  split,  the  number of issued  and
outstanding  shares of Common Stock will be reduced to approximately  9,271,771.
Furthermore,  in the case of each of the alternative Reverse Split transactions,
the  issued  and  outstanding  number of shares of Common  Stock will be further
reduced by a nominal amount on account of the cashed out fractional  shares.  At
this time, we do not know the total number of shares that will be cashed out and
the  total  cash to be paid by  I-trax.  Also at this  time,  we do not know the
average  daily closing price per share of the Common Stock on the OTC BB for the
period of ten trading days ending on the Effective Date.  However,  by way of an
example,  if the 1-for-3  Reverse Split had been  completed as of April 2, 2002,
when the average daily closing


                                       10



price  per  share  of the  Common  Stock  on the OTC BB for the ten  consecutive
trading  days then  ended was  $1.097,  the cash  payments  that would have been
issued on account of all fractional shares, including both registered and street
name holders,  would have been  approximately  $2,500.  The actual  amounts will
depend on the number of fractional  shares cashed out on the Effective  Date and
the then applicable cash out price.

      The par value of the Common Stock will remain at $.001 per share after the
Reverse Split.

Stock Certificates

      The Reverse Split will not affect any certificates  representing shares of
Common Stock held by registered  stockholders  owning the Minimum Number or more
shares of Common Stock  immediately prior to the Reverse Split. Old certificates
held  by  these   stockholders  will  continue  to  evidence  ownership  of  the
post-Reverse  Split shares. Our transfer agent,  however,  will make an entry in
our stock records  indicating  the  post-Reverse  Split number of shares held by
each registered stockholder and of any cash payment to which such stockholder is
entitled on account of any cashed out fractional  share. New stock  certificates
and cash payments will be delivered and paid to  stockholders on an ad hoc basis
as old  certificates  are  surrendered  to StockTrans in connection  with future
transactions.

      Registered  stockholders  owning less than the Minimum Number of shares of
Common  Stock  immediately  prior to the Reverse  Split will be contacted by the
Company or its transfer agent,  StockTrans,  Inc., as soon as practicable  after
the Effective Date. At that time, these  stockholders will receive  instructions
on how to surrender their certificates for cash payment. These stockholders will
not receive cash payment until they surrender their  outstanding  certificate(s)
to StockTrans.  Please do not send your certificates  until you receive separate
instructions from the Company or StockTrans.

Certain Federal Income Tax Consequences

      We summarize below certain  federal income tax  consequences to I-trax and
its stockholders resulting from the Reverse Split. This summary is based on U.S.
Federal income tax law existing as of the date of this Proxy Statement, and such
tax laws may  change,  even  retroactively.  This  summary  does not discuss all
aspects of Federal income taxation that may be important to you in light of your
individual  circumstances.  Many stockholders  (such as financial  institutions,
insurance  companies,  broker-dealers,  tax-exempt  organizations,  and  foreign
persons)  may be subject to special tax rules.  Other  stockholders  may also be
subject to special tax rules,  including  but not limited to:  stockholders  who
received Common Stock as  compensation  for services or pursuant to the exercise
of an employee stock option,  or stockholders who have held, or will hold, stock
as part of a straddle, hedging, or conversion transaction for Federal income tax
purposes. In addition,  this summary does not discuss any state, local, foreign,
or other tax  considerations.  This summary assumes that you are a U.S.  citizen
and have held,  and will hold,  your shares as capital assets under the Internal
Revenue Code. You should consult your tax advisor as to the particular  federal,
state,  local,  foreign,  and other tax consequences,  in light of your specific
circumstances.

      We  believe  that  the  Reverse  Split  will  be  treated  as  a  tax-free
"recapitalization" for Federal income tax purposes.

Federal Income Tax  Consequences to  Stockholders  who are not Cashed Out by the
Reverse Split:

      If you (1)  continue to hold Common  Stock  immediately  after the Reverse
Split,  and (2) receive no cash as a result of the Reverse  Split,  you will not
recognize  any gain or loss in the  Reverse  Split  and you  will  have the same
adjusted  tax basis and holding  period in your Common  Stock as you had in such
stock immediately prior to the Reverse Split.

Federal Income Tax Consequences to Cashed-Out Stockholders:

      If  you  receive  cash  as  a  result  of  the  Reverse  Split,  your  tax
consequences  will depend on whether,  in addition to receiving  cash,  you or a
person or entity related to you continues to hold Common Stock immediately after
the Reverse Split.

                                       11




      Stockholders  who  Exchange all of their Common Stock for Cash as a Result
      of the Reverse Split

      If you (1) receive cash in exchange for a fractional  share as a result of
the Reverse  Split,  (2) do not  continue to hold any Common  Stock  immediately
after the Reverse  Split,  and (3) are not related to any person or entity which
holds Common  Stock  immediately  after the Reverse  Split,  you will  recognize
capital  gain or loss.  The amount of capital  gain or loss you  recognize  will
equal the difference  between the cash you receive for your cashed-out stock and
your aggregate adjusted tax basis in such stock.

      If you are  related to a person or entity  who  continues  to hold  Common
Stock  immediately  after the Reverse Split, you will recognize gain in the same
manner as set forth in the  previous  paragraph,  provided  that your receipt of
cash  either (1) is "not  essentially  equivalent  to a  dividend,"  or (2) is a
"substantially disproportionate redemption of stock," as described below.

      o     "Not  Essentially  Equivalent  to a Dividend."  You will satisfy the
            "not essentially  equivalent to a dividend" test if the reduction in
            your  proportionate  interest in I-trax  resulting  from the Reverse
            Split is considered a "meaningful  reduction"  given your particular
            facts and circumstances. The Internal Revenue Service has ruled that
            a small  reduction by a minority  shareholder  whose  relative stock
            interest is minimal and who exercises no control over the affairs of
            the corporation will meet this test.

      o     "Substantially Disproportionate Redemption of Stock." The receipt of
            cash in the Reverse Split will be a "substantially  disproportionate
            redemption of stock" for you if the  percentage  of the  outstanding
            shares of Common  Stock owned by you  immediately  after the Reverse
            Split is less than 80% of the  percentage  of shares of Common Stock
            owned by you immediately before the Reverse Split.

      In applying these tests,  you will be treated as owning shares actually or
constructively  owned by certain individuals and entities related to you. If the
taxable amount is not treated as capital gain under any of the tests, it will be
treated first as ordinary dividend income to the extent of your ratable share of
I-trax's  undistributed  earnings  and  profits,  then as a  tax-free  return of
capital to the extent of your aggregate  adjusted tax basis in your shares,  and
any remaining gain will be treated as capital gain.

      Stockholders  who both  Receive  Cash and  Continue to hold  Common  Stock
      Immediately after the Reverse Split

      If you both receive cash as a result of the Reverse  Split and continue to
hold Common  Stock  immediately  after the Reverse  Split,  you  generally  will
recognize gain, but not loss, in an amount equal to the lesser of (1) the excess
of the sum of  aggregate  fair market  value of your shares of Common Stock plus
the cash received over your adjusted tax basis in the shares, and (2) the amount
of cash received in the Reverse Split.  In  determining  whether you continue to
hold Common Stock  immediately  after the Reverse Split,  you will be treated as
owning  shares  actually  or  constructively  owned by certain  individuals  and
entities  related to you.  Your  aggregate  adjusted tax basis in your shares of
Common  Stock held  immediately  after the  Reverse  Split will be equal to your
aggregate  adjusted  tax basis in your shares of Common  Stock held  immediately
prior to the Reverse  Split,  increased  by any gain  recognized  in the Reverse
Split, and decreased by the amount of cash received in the Reverse Split.

      Any gain  recognized  in the Reverse  Split will be  treated,  for Federal
income tax purposes,  as capital gain, provided that your receipt of cash either
(1) is "not essentially equivalent to a dividend" with respect to you, or (2) is
a "substantially disproportionate redemption of stock" with respect to you. (The
terms in quotation  marks in the  previous  sentence  are  discussed  above.) In
applying  these  tests,  you may possibly  take into account  sales of shares of
Common Stock that occur substantially  contemporaneously with the Reverse Split.
If your gain is not treated as capital gain under any of these  tests,  the gain
will be treated as ordinary dividend income to you to the extent of your ratable
share of I-trax's  undistributed earnings and profits, then as a tax-free return
of capital to the extent of your  aggregate  adjusted  tax basis in your shares,
and any remaining gain will be treated as a capital gain.

      You should consult your tax advisor as to the particular  Federal,  state,
local,  foreign,  and other tax  consequences  of the Reverse Split, in light of
your specific circumstances.

                                       12



Appraisal Rights

      Stockholders  do not have  appraisal  rights under  Delaware  state law or
under I-trax's  Certificate of  Incorporation  or By-laws in connection with the
Reverse Split.

Reservation Of Rights

      We reserve the right to abandon the Reverse Split without  further  action
by our stockholders at any time before the filing of the necessary amendments to
I-trax's Certificate of Incorporation with the Delaware Secretary of State, even
if the  Reverse  Split has been  authorized  by our  stockholders  at the Annual
Meeting,  and by voting in favor of the  Reverse  Split you are  expressly  also
authorizing  us to determine  not to proceed with the Reverse Split if we should
so decide.

RECOMMENDATION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

      THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE "FOR" EACH OF THE  PROPOSALS TO
AMEND THE CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION OF I-TRAX, INC. TO EFFECT, ALTERNATIVELY,
AS  DETERMINED  BY THE  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS  IN ITS  DISCRETION,  ONE OF  THREE
DIFFERENT REVERSE STOCK SPLITS.


                                 PROPOSAL NO. 5
                      RATIFICATION OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

      The  Company  is asking the  stockholders  to ratify  the  appointment  of
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as the Company's independent auditors for the fiscal
year ending December 31, 2002. The affirmative vote of the holders of a majority
of shares  present or represented by proxy and voting at the Annual Meeting will
be required to ratify the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

      In the event the stockholders fail to ratify the appointment, the Board of
Directors will  reconsider its selection.  Even if the  appointment is ratified,
the  Board,  in its  discretion,  may  direct  the  appointment  of a  different
independent  accounting firm at any time during the year if the Board feels that
such a change would be in the Company's and its stockholders' best interests.

      Representatives of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP are expected to be present
at the Annual  Meeting,  will have the  opportunity  to make a statement if they
desire to do so, and will be available to respond to appropriate questions.

      The  Company  engaged  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP on  November  2,  2000,
pursuant to the authorization of the Board.

      During 2001, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP provided services in the following
categories and amounts:

          1.  Audit Fees                                                 $37,500
          2.  Financial Information Systems Design and Implementation         --
          3.  All Other Fees                                              15,000

      The Audit  Committee has considered the above  non-audit  services and has
determined   that  these  services  do  not  compromise  the   independence   of
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

                                       13



RECOMMENDATION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

      THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE  RATIFICATION  OF THE
SELECTION OF  PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS,  LLP TO SERVE AS THE COMPANY'S INDEPENDENT
AUDITORS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2002.


           STOCK OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

      The table below sets forth,  as of April 2, 2002, the number of shares and
percentage of Common Stock beneficially owned by:

      o     our Chief  Executive  Officer,  four other most  highly  compensated
            executive officers based on compensation  earned during 2001 and one
            former executive officer;

      o     each director;

      o     all directors and executive officers as a group; and

      o     each  person who is known by the  Company to own  beneficially  five
            percent or more of the outstanding Common Stock.

      Beneficial  ownership has been  determined  in accordance  with Rule 13d-3
under the  Exchange  Act.  Under this rule,  certain  shares may be deemed to be
beneficially  owned by more than one person (if, for example,  persons share the
power to vote or the power to dispose of the shares).  In  addition,  shares are
deemed  to be  beneficially  owned by a person  if the  person  has the right to
acquire the shares (for example,  upon exercise of an option or warrant)  within
sixty  (60)  days of April 2,  2002,  the date as of which  the  information  is
provided.  In computing the  percentage  ownership of any person,  the amount of
shares is deemed to  include  the  amount of shares  beneficially  owned by such
person (and only such person) by reason of such acquisition rights. As a result,
the  percentage  of  outstanding  shares of any person as shown in the following
table does not  necessarily  reflect the  person's  actual  voting  power at any
particular date.

                                       14



      To the Company's  knowledge,  except as indicated in the footnotes to this
table and under  applicable  community  property  laws, the persons named in the
table have sole voting and investment power with respect to all shares of Common
Stock shown as beneficially owned by them.



                                                  Shares of         Options and
                                                Common Stock          Warrants
                                                Beneficially        Exercisable                       Percent of
Named Executive Officers and Directors*             Owned          Within 60 Days        Total           Class
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                            
Frank A. Martin (1)                                  5,578,050         1,312,808        6,890,858        14.5
John Blazek (2)                                      4,925,071                --        4,925,071        10.6
Hans C. Kastensmith                                  2,921,178           231,615        3,152,793         6.8
David R. Bock (1)                                    2,833,408                --        2,833,408         6.1
Gary Reiss                                             687,308         1,924,203        2,611,511         5.4
Carol Rehtmeyer (3)                                  1,676,620           280,000        1,956,620         4.2
David C. McCormack                                     782,680           471,899        1,254,579         2.7
Yuri Rozenfeld (4)                                      82,902           413,270          496,172         1.1
Anthony Tomaro                                          30,684           368,671          399,355          **
Philip D. Green (5)                                      6,000           305,000          311,000          **
John R. Palumbo                                         25,000           175,000          200,000          **
Michael M.E. Johns, M.D.                                    --           150,000          150,000          **
William S. Wheeler                                      50,000            68,750          118,750          **
Craig Jones, M.D.                                      130,000                --          130,000          **
Arthur N. Leibowitz, M.D.                                   --                --               --          --
All executive officers and directors as a           17,495,493         5,850,797       23,346,290        44.7
group (16 persons)




                                                                  Warrants and
                                                  Shares of       Convertible
                                                Common Stock       Securities
                                                Beneficially      Exercisable                         Percent of
5% Stockholders                                     Owned        Within 60 Days        Total             Class
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                             
Nantucket Healthcare Ventures I, L.P. (1)            2,333,408                --        2,333,408         5.0
Woodglen Group, L.P. (6)                             3,155,540         1,125,000        4,280,540         9.0
Palladin Opportunity Fund, LLC (7)                          --         3,538,461        3,538,461         7.3


----------------------------------------------
*     Named executive officers and directors can be reached at I-trax, Inc., One
      Logan Square, Suite 2615, 130 N. 18th Street,  Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania
      19103.

**    Less than 1% of the outstanding shares of Common Stock.

(1)   The Nantucket  Group,  LLC is the general partner of Nantucket  Healthcare
      Ventures I, L.P.  ("Ventures").  The  Nantucket  Group has sole voting and
      sole  dispositive  power  with  respect to the  shares  held by  Ventures.
      Messrs.  Martin  and  Bock  are  members  and  Managing  Directors  of The
      Nantucket Group. Therefore,  Messrs. Martin and Bock may be deemed to have
      beneficial  ownership of the shares held by Ventures.  Messrs.  Martin and
      Bock disclaim beneficial ownership of the shares held by Ventures,  except
      to the extent of their respective pecuniary interest in Ventures.  Messrs.
      Martin and Bock own directly  3,244,642 and 500,000 shares,  respectively.
      The  address for  Ventures  is c/o The  Nantucket  Group,  LLC,  One Logan
      Square, Suite 2615, 130 N. 18th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103.

(2)   Includes 661,972 shares held in escrow for the benefit of Mr. Blazek.

(3)   Includes 225,352 shares held in escrow for the benefit of Ms. Rehtmeyer.

(4)   Mr.  Rozenfeld  is a partner  of The  Spartan  Group  Limited  Partnership
      ("Spartan"), which owns 30,000 shares. Mr. Rozenfeld has shared voting and
      shared  dispositive power with respect to the shares held by


                                       15



      Spartan.  Mr. Rozenfeld may be deemed to have beneficial  ownership of the
      shares held by Spartan.  Mr. Rozenfeld disclaims  beneficial  ownership of
      the shares held by Spartan, except to the extent of his pecuniary interest
      in Spartan. Mr. Rozenfeld owns 52,902 directly.

(5)   Mr. Green is an affiliate of Health Industry Investments, LLC, a holder of
      130,000 options exercisable as of June 1, 2002.

(6)   Woodglen  Associates,  LLC is the general partner of Woodglen Group, L.P.,
      and, as such, has sole voting and sole  dispositive  power with respect to
      the shares it holds. Its address is 101 East Street Road,  Kennett Square,
      Pennsylvania 19348.

(7)   Palladin  Asset  Management,  L.L.C.  ("PAM")  is the  managing  member of
      Palladin Opportunity Fund, LLC ("POF").  Palladin Capital Management,  LLC
      ("PCM"),  is  the  sole  general  partner  of  The  Palladin  Group,  L.P.
      ("Palladin").  Palladin is the investment advisor of POF. PAM and PCM have
      shared voting and shared dispositive power with respect to the shares held
      by POF. Because its beneficial  ownership arises solely from its status as
      the investment  advisor of POF,  Palladin  expressly  disclaims  equitable
      ownership of and pecuniary interest in any shares. The business address of
      POF is c/o The Palladin Group, 195 Maplewood Avenue, Maplewood, New Jersey
      07040.




                 EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION AND RELATED INFORMATION

      The Company's executive officers and their ages as of April 2, 2002 are as
follows:



             Name                         Age                                   Position
-------------------------------     -----------------     -----------------------------------------------------

                                                    
Frank A. Martin                            51             Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, Treasurer and
                                                              Director
John Blazek                                47             Member of the Office of the President and Director
Carol Rehtmeyer, Ph.D.                     52             Member of the Office of the President and Director
Gary Reiss                                 51             Member of the Office of the President
Anthony Tomaro, CPA                        37             Chief Financial Officer
David C. McCormack                         32             Chief Technology Officer
Michael O'Connell, M.D.                    42             Chief Medical Officer
Yuri Rozenfeld                             33             General Counsel and Secretary


      Please  see  information  under  Proposal  No.  1 above  for  biographical
information of Ms. Rehtmeyer and Messrs. Martin and Blazek.

      Gary  Reiss has been a Member of the  Office  of the  President  of I-trax
since March 2002.  From  February  2001 to March 2002,  Mr.  Reiss was the Chief
Operating Officer of I-trax. Mr. Reiss was the Chief Operating Officer of Health
Management  from March 2000 to February  2001.  Mr. Reiss has over nine years of
experience  as the chief  operating  officer of health and  medical  information
management companies.  From November 1999 to March 2000, Mr. Reiss served as the
Chief Operating Officer of EduNeering,  Inc., an electronic knowledge management
company,  where he was responsible for positioning the company as a web provider
and portal.  From 1996 to 1999, Mr. Reiss served as the Chief Operating  Officer
of Allscripts.  From 1992 to 1995, Mr. Reiss was an Executive Vice President and
Chief  Operating  Officer of PDS, a company he founded with Mr. Martin and which
was later acquired by Allscripts.

      Anthony  Tomaro,  CPA has been the Chief  Financial  Officer of I-trax and
Health Management since January 2001. Prior to joining I-trax,  Mr. Tomaro was a
partner in the New York certified public  accounting firm of Massella,  Tomaro &
Co.,  LLP.  He is a  member  of  the  American  Institute  of  Certified  Public
Accountants and New York State Society of Certified  Public  Accountants.  Since
1994,  Mr. Tomaro has served as a partner in accounting  firms  specializing  in
Securities and Exchange  Commission  accounting and auditing services along with
domestic taxes and consulting  services.  Prior to 1994, he was a manager with a
large regional accounting firm specializing in the real estate industry.

                                       16




      David C. McCormack has been the Chief  Technology  Officer of I-trax since
February 2001 and of Health Management since January 2000. Mr. McCormack was the
Vice  President of  Engineering  of  Member-Link  from January 1999 until it was
acquired by Health  Management in December 1999. Mr.  McCormack  oversees all of
I-trax's software  development efforts. He has developed and deployed systems in
most major  programming  languages.  From April 1997  until  January  1999,  Mr.
McCormack  served as a partner in a Virginia  based  consulting  firm,  where he
oversaw all software developed by the firm,  including:  an inventory management
system;  an  EDI  transaction  processing  system;  and an  electronic  document
management system.  From January 1995 until April 1997, Mr. McCormack acted as a
consultant to Lockheed  Martin  Mission  Systems  during its  development of the
Global  Transportation  Network  (GTN) for the Air Force.  Mr.  McCormack  prior
responsibilities  have  included  the design,  development  and  integration  of
mission  critical  systems for the Army, Navy and Air Force. Mr. McCormack has a
U.S. Government Top Secret clearance.

      Michael  O'Connell,  M.D.,  has been the Chief  Medical  Officer of I-trax
since February 2001 and of Health  Management since November 1999. In this role,
he oversees the content of numerous I-trax software  applications and population
health  management  programs.  He is responsible  for  intellectual  content and
successful compliance with current Center for Disease Control and other national
immunization guidelines.  Dr. O'Connell has served as the Assistant Chief of the
Allergy-Immunology  Department  at Walter  Reed  Army  Medical  Center  and as a
Co-Consultant to the Army Surgeon General for Allergy & Immunizations  since May
1997.  Dr.  O'Connell has served as a United  States Army Medical  Officer since
1985.

      Yuri Rozenfeld has been the General  Counsel of I-trax since July 2000 and
Secretary  of  I-trax  since  March  2002.  From July  2000 to March  2002,  Mr.
Rozenfeld served as the General Counsel and Assistant Secretary of I-trax and of
Health Management.  From April 1997 to July 2000, Mr. Rozenfeld was an associate
in the Business and Finance  Group at Ballard  Spahr  Andrews & Ingersoll,  LLP,
where he  represented  small- and mid-cap public  companies and venture  capital
funds  in a  broad  range  of  corporate  matters,  including  stock  and  asset
acquisitions,  mergers,  venture capital  investments,  venture fund formations,
partnership  and limited  liability  company matters and securities law matters.
From 1995 to April 1997, Mr. Rozenfeld was an associate  specializing in product
liability litigation with Riker, Danzig, Scherer, Hyland & Perretti LLP.

                                       17



      The  following  Summary  Compensation  Table sets  forth the  compensation
earned by the following individuals:  (1) the Company's Chief Executive Officer,
(2) four other most highly  compensated  executive  officers who were serving as
such as of December 31, 2001,  and (3) one former highly  compensated  executive
officer.  Compensation  for  fiscal  years  2001 and 2000  was  received  by the
identified  executive  officers from Health  Management and for fiscal year 1999
from Member-Link.




                                            Summary Compensation Table

                                                    Annual Compensation                             Long-Term
                                                                                                  Compensation
Name and Position                      Year              Salary                Other (6)        Number of Options
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                         
Frank A. Martin                        2001           $ 175,000  (1)(2)           $ 6,000            350,000
  Chairman, Chief Executive            2000             146,063  (1)                4,500            350,000
  Officer and Treasurer                1999              25,000  (3)                   --                 --

Hans C. Kastensmith                    2001           $ 105,671  (1)(2)                --                 --
  Vice-Chairman and former             2000             149,910  (1)                   --                 --
  President                            1999             202,250  (4)                   --                 --

Gary Reiss                             2001           $ 175,000  (1)(2)           $ 6,000            700,000
  Member of the Office of the          2000             134,965  (1)                4,500            700,000
  President                            1999                  --                        --                 --

David C. McCormack                     2001           $ 125,000  (1)(2)                --                 --
  Chief Technology Officer             2000             119,750  (1)                   --                 --
                                       1999             142,234  (5)                   --                 --

Anthony Tomaro                         2001           $ 150,000  (1)(2)                --            200,000
  Chief Financial Officer              2000                  --                        --             200,000 (7)
                                       1999                  --                        --                 --

Yuri Rozenfeld                         2001           $ 124,375  (1)(2)                --            200,000
  General Counsel and Secretary        2000              49,271  (1)                   --            200,000
                                       1999                  --                        --                 --


----------------------------------

(1)   Salary includes amounts  deferred under the Company's 401(k) Plan.  Salary
      also includes amounts deferred  pursuant to the Company's salary deferment
      program in effect from November 2000 to December 31, 2001. Pursuant to the
      salary deferment program, Mr. Martin deferred $29,166 in 2000 and $135,357
      in 2001; Mr. Kastensmith deferred $25,000 in 2000 and $70,005 in 2001; Mr.
      Reiss  deferred  $29,166  in 2000  and  $135,357  in 2001;  Mr.  McCormack
      deferred $20,834 in 2000 and $112,844 in 2001; Mr. Tomaro deferred $70,665
      in 2001; and Mr.  Rozenfeld  deferred  $8,958 in 2000 and $65,132 in 2001.
      Further,  effective as of December 31,  2001,  all of the named  executive
      officers,  excluding Mr.  Kastensmith,  surrendered the deferred salary in
      exchange for warrants to acquire Common Stock.  These officers  received a
      warrant to acquire one share of Common Stock exercisable at $.15 per share
      for each $.35 of deferred  salary.  Accordingly,  if an officer elected to
      exchange  accrued salary for warrants and later  exercised these warrants,
      the  effective  per share  price for each share of Common  Stock that such
      officer  would  receive  would be $.50.  The  price of $.50 per  share was
      intended  to equal  the  price per  share  paid by  third-party  investors
      purchasing  Common  Stock  from the  Company in 2001  private  placements.
      Accordingly,  Messrs. Martin and Reiss each received 470,066 warrants, Mr.
      McCormack received 381,937 warrants, Mr. Tomaro received 201,900 warrants,
      and Mr. Rozenfeld received 211,686 warrants.

(2)   Effective  as of December  31, 2001 and  pursuant to the salary  deferment
      program  described above,  the executive  officers were granted a total of
      404,164  warrants to acquire Common Stock at an exercise price of $.50 per
      share  and a total  of  99,080  warrants  to  acquire  Common  Stock at an
      exercise price of $1.00 per share.  The warrants  exercisable at $.50 were
      allocated as follows:  Mr. Martin,  98,435; Mr.  Kastensmith,  73,896; Mr.
      Reiss,  98,435;  Mr.  McCormack,  68,919;  Mr.  Tomaro,  31,250;  and  Mr.
      Rozenfeld,  33,229.  The warrants  exercisable  at $1.00 were allocated as
      follows:  Mr. Martin,  21,876; Mr. Kastensmith,  7,719; Mr.

                                       18




      Reiss,  21,876;  Mr.  McCormack,  21,043;  Mr.  Tomaro,  13,023;  and  Mr.
      Rozenfeld,  13,543. These extra warrants were issued to all employees that
      participated in the salary deferment program because similar warrants were
      issued by the Company to  third-party  investors  in  connection  with the
      several private placement completed by the Company in 2001. As a condition
      to deferring  pay in the salary  deferment  program,  the  employees  were
      promised by the  Company  that they would be treated in the same manner as
      third-party investors in the Company.

(3)   Salary includes 250,000 shares of Common Stock, valued at $0.10 per share,
      issued as payment for services.

(4)   Salary  includes  1,000,000  shares of Common Stock,  valued at $0.125 per
      share, issued as payment for services.

(5)   Salary  includes  330,000  shares of Common  Stock,  valued at $0.125  per
      share, issued as payment for services.

(6)   Automobile and parking allowance.

(7)   Grant  approved by the Board of Directors on December 29, 2000,  effective
      as of January 1, 2001.




      The  following  table  contains  information  concerning  the stock option
grants made to each of the identified  executive officers during the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2001. No stock appreciation rights were granted in 2001.



                                            Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year

                           Number of
                           Securities         Percent of Total
                           Underlying         Options Granted to    Exercise Price
                             Options             Employees in        (Dollars per
Name                         Granted            Fiscal Year (1)          Share)          Expiration Date
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                 
Frank A. Martin               350,000                15.2%                $ .55              4/9/2011

Hans C. Kastensmith                --                   --                  N/A                   N/A

Gary Reiss                    700,000                30.4%                  .55              4/9/2011

David C. McCormack                 --                   --                  N/A                   N/A

Anthony Tomaro                200,000                 8.7%                  .55              4/9/2011

Yuri Rozenfeld                200,000                 8.7%                  .55              4/9/2011


------------------------------------

(1)   Based on an aggregate of 2,302,500 options granted in the fiscal year.




                                       19



      The following  table  contains  information  about each of the  identified
executive  officers option  exercises in fiscal year 2001 and option holdings as
of December 31, 2001. No stock  appreciation  rights were outstanding at the end
of that year.



                 Aggregated Option Exercises in Last Fiscal Year and Fiscal Year-End Option Values

                                                                  Number of Securities            Value of
                                 Shares                          Underlying Unexercised          Unexercised
                              Acquired on        Value            Options at Year End        In-the-Money Options
Name                            Exercise        Realized       Exercisable/Unexercisable       at Year End (1)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                     
Frank A. Martin                   --                --             216,666 / 483,334                $315,000

Hans C. Kastensmith               --                --                            --                      --

Gary Reiss                        --                --             499,998 / 900,002                 787,500

David C. McCormack                --                --                            --                      --

Anthony Tomaro                    --                --             116,666 / 283,334                 180,000

Yuri Rozenfeld                    --                --             166,666 / 233,334                 180,000

-----------------------------

(1)   Based on the closing  price of the Common  Stock on  December  31, 2001 of
      $1.45 per share, less the exercise price payable for such shares.




             EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS AND CHANGE IN CONTROL ARRANGEMENTS

Employment Contracts

      Health  Management is party to an employment  agreement with each of Frank
A. Martin, Gary Reiss, Hans C. Kastensmith and David C. McCormack.

      Frank A. Martin and Gary Reiss

      On  December  29,  2000,  Health  Management  entered  into an  employment
agreement with each of Frank A. Martin,  the Chief  Executive  Officer of I-trax
and of Health  Management and Gary Reiss, the Chief Operating  Officer of I-trax
and of Health  Management.  Each agreement is for an initial term of three years
ending on December 28,  2003.  Thereafter,  each  employment  agreement  extends
automatically  for  successive  periods  of  one  year,  unless  the  applicable
executive officer elects not to renew the agreement. Each agreement provides for
an annual base salary  during the initial  term of $175,000 and such bonuses and
option  grants as may be approved by the Board of Directors or its  Compensation
Committee from time to time.

      The Company may  terminate Mr. Martin or Mr.  Reiss's  employment  with or
without  cause at any time.  In addition,  Mr. Martin or Mr. Reiss may terminate
his employment upon 90 days notice or upon shorter notice for good reason.  Good
reason includes the failure by the Company to continue the executive  officer in
his  executive   position,   material  diminution  of  the  executive  officer's
responsibilities,  duties or authority,  assignment to the executive  officer of
duties  inconsistent  with his position or requiring the executive officer to be
permanently   based  anywhere  other  than  within  25  miles  of  Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.

      In the event either  employment  agreement is terminated  without cause or
for good reason the Company will pay the applicable executive officer severance,
equal to one year's  salary,  payable over one year.  In addition,  in the event
either employment  agreement is terminated without cause or for good reason, the
executive  officer  will  remain  subject  to the  non-competition  restrictions
described below only so long as he is receiving severance payments. Finally, one
hundred  percent  (100%) of options  granted to such  executive  officers  shall
accelerate and vest immediately.

                                       20



      With the  exception  of the  circumstances  described  in the  immediately
preceding  paragraph,  each executive  officer agreed not to compete against the
Company for a period of one year following the expiration of the initial term or
any renewal term,  even if the actual  employment  is  terminated  prior to such
expiration.  Each  executive  officer  also  agreed not to use or  disclose  any
confidential  information  of the  Company  for at least  five  years  after the
expiration  of the  original  term or any  additional  term,  even if the actual
employment is  terminated  prior to such  expiration.  Finally,  each  executive
officer  also  agreed  that any  invention  he  develops  during his  employment
relating to the business of the Company will belong to the Company.

      Hans C. Kastensmith

      On June 1, 1999,  Member-Link,  a company acquired by Health Management in
1999,  entered  into an  employment  agreement  with  Hans C.  Kastensmith,  the
Vice-Chairman  and director of I-trax.  The term of the agreement is three years
ending  on May 31,  2002.  Health  Management  is  bound by the  agreement  as a
successor-in-interest to Member-Link.  The agreement provides for an annual base
salary of $175,000 and cash bonuses from time to time as the Company's  Board of
Directors may deem appropriate.

      The agreement  prohibits Mr.  Kastensmith  from using or disclosing any of
the  Company's  confidential  information  at any time in the  future and he has
agreed that any  inventions he develops  during his  employment  relating to the
Company's  business will become the Company's  property.  He is also  prohibited
from  competing  with  the  Company  for a  period  of one  year  following  the
termination  of the  agreement,  unless the resulting  termination is due to the
Company's breaching the agreement.

      Mr.  Kastensmith  and the Company  agreed to terminate  Mr.  Kastensmith's
full-time employment in August 2001 without a formal amendment of his employment
agreement. Mr. Katensmith,  in his capacity as the Vice-Chairman and director of
the Company, continues to assist the Company on an as needed basis.

      David C. McCormack

      On  September  28,  2000 and  effective  as of  January  1,  2000,  Health
Management  entered into an employment  agreement with David C.  McCormack,  the
Chief Technology Officer of I-trax and of Health Management, for an initial term
of three years ending on December 31, 2002. Thereafter, the employment agreement
renews  automatically  for successive  periods of one year,  unless either party
elects not to renew. The agreement provides for an annual base salary during the
initial term of $125,000  and bonuses and option  grants that may be approved by
the  Company's  Board of Directors or its  Compensation  Committee  from time to
time.

      In the event the Company  terminates Mr.  McCormack's  employment  without
cause at any time  during his  employment,  the Company  will pay Mr.  McCormack
severance,  equal to one year's salary,  payable over one year. In the event the
employment  agreement is terminated  without cause,  the executive  officer will
remain subject to the non-competition  restrictions described below only so long
as he is receiving severance payments.

      With the exception of the  circumstance  described  above,  Mr.  McCormack
agreed not to compete against the Company for a period of one year following the
expiration  of the  original  term  or any  renewal  term,  even  if the  actual
employment is terminated prior to such expiration. Mr. McCormack also agreed not
to use or disclose any confidential information of the Company for at least five
years after the expiration of the original term or any additional  term, even if
the actual employment is terminated prior to such expiration. Mr. McCormack also
agreed that any  invention  he develops  during his  employment  relating to the
business of the Company will be its sole and absolute property.

      Mr.  McCormack  may  terminate  the agreement at any time upon at least 60
days written notice.

Change of Control Arrangements

      The Compensation  Committee, as administrator of the Company's 2000 Equity
Compensation Plan and 2001 Equity Compensation Plan, can provide for accelerated
vesting  of the  shares  of Common  Stock  subject  to  outstanding  options  in
connection with certain changes in control of the Company.

                                       21




        SECTION 16(a) OF THE EXCHANGE ACT BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP COMPLIANCE

      The  members of the Board of  Directors,  the  executive  officers  of the
Company  and  persons  who hold more  than ten  percent  (10%) of the  Company's
outstanding  Common Stock are subject to the reporting  requirements  of Section
16(a) of the  Exchange  Act which  require  them to file reports with respect to
their ownership of Common Stock and their  transactions  in Common Stock.  Based
upon (1) the copies of Section 16(a) reports that the Company received from such
persons for their 2001 fiscal year  transactions  in the Common  Stock and their
Common Stock holdings and (2) the written  representations  received from one or
more of these persons that no annual Form 5 reports were required to be filed by
them  for the  2001  fiscal  year,  the  Company  believes  that  all  reporting
requirements  under  Section  16(a)  for such  fiscal  year were met in a timely
manner by its executive  officers,  Board  members and greater than  ten-percent
stockholders,  except Frank A. Martin, an executive officer and a 10% beneficial
owner, filed a delinquent Form 4, reporting:  a conversion of a loan into Common
Stock; the receipt of warrants in exchange for accrued salary and  participation
in a salary deferment program;  and receipt of Common Stock upon the exercise of
a warrant.

              CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

      Dr. Craig A. Jones, a director of I-trax,  is the Director of the Division
of Allergy & Immunology  at the Los Angeles  County and  University  of Southern
California  Medical  Center,  which  is  operated  by  the  Los  Angeles  County
Department of Health  Services  (DHS).  The Los Angeles  County DHS purchased an
information  system  from the  Company to support  implementation  of a clinical
disease management program for which it paid the Company approximately  $100,000
in 2000 and $61,000 in 2001. Dr. Jones is the director of that clinical program.
In September 2000, the Company also entered into a verbal  consulting  agreement
with Dr. Jones. Under the agreement, in addition to attending Board meeting, Dr.
Jones  agreed to assist the Company  with product  development  efforts,  attend
trade shows on its behalf and originate business leads. Under the agreement, Dr.
Jones was to be  compensated  at a rate of $3,000 per month.  The payments  were
suspended in November 2000.

      In May 2000,  Health Management  entered into a consulting  agreement with
Health Industry Investments, LLC, an affiliate of Philip D. Green, a director of
the Company.  Under the consulting agreement,  Health Industry agreed to perform
certain services for Health  Management,  which include arranging  introductions
with  potential  customers.  In turn,  Health  Industry  received  the  right to
purchase 20,000 shares of common stock of Health  Management at a purchase price
of $2 per share. The beneficial  owners of Health Industry  exercised this right
and purchased  these shares in September  2000  pursuant to a private  placement
conducted by Health Management. In addition, Health Industry received options to
acquire up to 80,000 shares of common stock of Health  Management at an exercise
price of $0.625 as  compensation  for  performing  services under the consulting
agreement.  The  options  were to vest in equal  monthly  installments  over the
one-year  term of the  consulting  agreement.  All options were  accelerated  in
October  2000. In April 2001,  Health  Industry  received  options to acquire an
additional  200,000  shares of  Common  Stock at an  exercise  price of $0.55 as
compensation for continuing to perform services under the consulting  agreement.
These options vest over two years.

      Effective  as of December 29, 2000,  Health  Management  issued to each of
Messrs.  Martin and Reiss 250,000 shares of common stock of Health Management at
a per share  purchase  price of $2. The  aggregate  purchase  price was  payable
pursuant to a Promissory  Note and Pledge  Agreement in the principal  amount of
$499,750.  The principal  amount of each  Promissory  Note and Pledge  Agreement
accrues  interest at an annual rate of 5.87%. The principal and interest on each
Promissory Note and Pledge Agreement was payable in five annual  installments of
principal and interest beginning on December 29, 2001. Furthermore, in the event
these officers were performing  their duties  adequately and were  accomplishing
the  Company's  goals,  the Company's  Compensation  Committee had the option of
waiving and  forgiving  any of the annual  payments of principal and interest in
lieu of granting such officers a cash bonus.  This  transaction was rescinded in
2001.


      From November 2000 through May 2001, the Company  completed an offering of
convertible  promissory  notes and stock purchase  warrants.  The Company raised
$2,000,000 in this offering.  Of this total,  $700,000 was loaned to the Company
by Woodglen Group, L.P., a 5% stockholder of the Company, $250,000 was loaned to
the Company by Frank A. Martin,  its Chief Executive  Officer,  and $250,000 was
loaned to the Company by Gary  Reiss,

                                       22




a Member of the Company's  Office of the President.  The convertible  promissory
notes had a maturity date of one year from the date of issue and accrue interest
at an annual rate of 8% with a default annual rate of 12%. The principal  amount
of, and accrued and unpaid interest under, the convertible promissory notes were
convertible into Common Stock.  The stock purchase  warrants grant the holders a
right to purchase two shares of Common  Stock for each $1 in original  principal
amount of convertible  promissory  notes.  The initial  conversion  price of the
convertible  promissory  notes  and the  exercise  price of the  stock  purchase
warrants were $2 per share, subject, in each case, to full-ratchet anti-dilution
adjustment  in the event of a subsequent  offering  with an effective  per share
price of less than $2.

      On June 25, 2001 and pursuant to an Exchange Agreement dated May 14, 2001,
the holders of the convertible promissory notes, including Woodglen Group, L.P.,
a 5% stockholder of the Company,  Mr. Martin, our Chief Executive  Officer,  and
Mr. Reiss, a Member of the Company's Office of the President, agreed to exchange
the  principal  of,  and  accrued  interest  through  May 15,  2001  under,  the
promissory  notes in the aggregate  amount of $2,280,157 for Common Stock at the
exchange price of $.50 per share. As consideration for the exchange, the Company
reset the exercise price of the warrants to acquire  2,200,000  shares of Common
Stock, originally issued together with the convertible promissory notes, to $.50
per share.  Accordingly,  in the  transaction,  Woodglen  Group,  L.P.  received
1,455,540  shares and warrants to acquire  700,000  shares,  Mr. Martin received
523,452  shares and warrants to acquire  250,000  shares and Mr. Reiss  received
521,808 shares and warrants to acquire 250,000 shares.

      Effective as of June 25, 2001, the Company  completed a private  placement
of 2,200,000 shares of Common Stock at $.50,  yielding to the Company a total of
$1,100,000.  Woodglen  Group,  L.P., a 5% stockholder  of the Company,  invested
$850,000 in this private placement.  As consideration for completing the private
placement,  the Company  issued to the  participating  investors  stock purchase
warrants  to  purchase  one share of Common  Stock for each $2  invested in this
private  placement  at an  exercise  price  of $1.00  per  share.  The  Company,
therefore, issued warrants to acquire a total of 550,000 shares of Common Stock,
of which  warrant  to  acquire  425,000  shares  of Common  Stock was  issued to
Woodglen Group, L.P.

      During the first and second  quarters of 2001, Mr.  Martin,  the Company's
Chief  Executive  Officer,  loaned the Company  $515,000  to fund the  Company's
working capital deficiency.  Of this amount, the Company repaid $240,000 in June
2001. On June 25, 2001, Mr. Martin exchanged the remaining $275,000 of the loan,
and accrued interest of $9,163,  into Common Stock at the exchange price of $.50
per share. The Company issued 568,324 shares in this exchange. In addition,  the
Company issued Mr. Martin a stock purchase warrants to acquire 515,000 shares at
an exercise price of $.50 per share as consideration  for this bridge financing.
The terms of this  exchange  transaction  and warrant  issuance,  including  the
exchange  price and the  calculation  of the number of  warrants  granted,  were
intended to be identical to those  applicable to the debt  exchange  transaction
closed by the Company on June 25, 2001 and described above.

      During the first and second  quarters of 2001,  Mr. Reiss, a Member of the
Company's  Office of the  President,  loaned the  Company  $240,000  to fund the
Company's  working  capital  deficiency.  The Company repaid this amount in June
2001. On June 25, 2001, as  consideration  for the loan,  the Company issued Mr.
Reiss stock  purchase  warrants to acquire  240,000 shares of Common Stock at an
exercise price of $.50 per share. The terms of the warrant  issuance,  including
the calculation of the number of warrants granted, were intended to be identical
to those  applicable to the debt exchange  transaction  closed by the Company on
June 25, 2001 and described above.

      On March 2,  2001,  the  Company  entered  into an  Amended  and  Restated
Promissory Note and Warrant Purchase  Agreement with a group of investors led by
Psilos Group Partners, L.P. (collectively, the "Psilos Group") pursuant to which
the  Psilos  Group  agreed,  among  other  things,  to loan  the  Company  up to
$1,000,000.  The Psilos Group included Nantucket  Healthcare Ventures I, L.P., a
5%  stockholder  of the Company and a venture  fund managed by Mr.  Martin,  the
Company's Chief Executive  Officer.  As  consideration,  the Company granted the
Psilos  Group  warrants to acquire  2.632 shares of its Common Stock at $.10 per
share for each $1 of the face amount of the loan.  The loan accrues  interest at
an annual rate of 8%, with an annual  default rate of 12%, and is due five years
from  original  date of  issuance.  The  Psilos  Group  funded  $692,809  of the
$1,000,000 and received  warrants to purchase  1,823,474 shares of Common Stock.
Of such total amounts, Nantucket Healthcare Ventures funded $75,000 and received
warrants to purchase 197,400 shares of Common Stock.  Effective as of January 4,
2002,  all Psilos Group  investors  exercised  their  warrants  using a cashless
exercise feature and received an aggregate of 1,701,584 shares of Common Stock.

                                       23



      Beginning in November  2000,  in an effort to conserve  cash,  the Company
established a salary  deferment  program  whereby  certain  executive  officers,
including  Messrs.  Martin,  Reiss,  Tomaro,  McCormack  and  Rozenfeld  and Dr.
O'Connell,  and  other  employees  agreed  to defer  all or a  portion  of their
salaries. To induce employees to participate in the salary deferment program the
Company  agreed to pay interest at an annual rate of 8% on the deferred  salary.
In  addition,  the  Company  promised  participating  employees  that they would
receive (1) an option to convert  deferred  salary into equity on the same basis
as  third-party  investors  in the Company and (2)  "coverage  warrants"  to the
extent  they were also  granted to  third-party  investors  while  participating
employees were deferring pay. The Company ended the salary deferment  program on
December 31, 2001. As of December 31, 2001,  the Company  accrued  $1,038,876 on
account  of  deferred  salaries  and  interest  thereon.  Certain  participating
employees,  including Messrs.  Martin,  Reiss, Tomaro,  McCormack and Rozenfeld,
agreed to exchange a total of $814,595 of accrued salary, together with interest
thereon,  for  warrants  to  acquire  2,327,415  shares of Common  Stock with an
exercise  price of $0.15  per  share.  The  number  of  warrants  issued to each
employee  electing to surrender  accrued  salary was  calculated by dividing the
employee's total accrued salary and interest thereon by $0.35.  Accordingly,  if
an employee  elected to exchange accrued salary for warrants and later exercised
these  warrants,  the  effective  per share price for the shares of Common Stock
that the employee  would receive would be $.50.  The price of $.50 per share was
intended to equal the price per share paid by third-party  investors  purchasing
Common Stock in several  private  placements  completed  by I-trax in 2001.  The
Company  also  granted  the  participating  employees  warrants  to  acquire  an
aggregate  of 710,983  shares of Common  Stock at an exercise  price of $.50 per
share and warrants to acquire an aggregate of 102,073  shares of Common Stock at
an  aggregate  of $1.00 per  share.  These  extra  warrants  were  issued to all
employees that  participated  in the salary  deferment  program  because similar
warrants were issued by the Company to third-party  investors in connection with
the several private placement completed by the Company in 2001.

      During the third and fourth  quarters of 2001,  Mr.  Reiss,  the Company's
Chief Operating Officer,  loaned the Company $296,000, Mr. Martin, the Company's
Chief  Executive  Officer,  loaned the  Company  $280,000  and Alan  Sakal,  the
Company's Senior Vice President,  loaned the Company $100,000,  in each case, to
fund the Company's  working capital  deficiency.  The Company repaid Mr. Sakal's
loan in January 2002. The outstanding loans accrue interest at an annual rate of
8%. On December 20, 2001, as  consideration  for the loans,  the Company  issued
Messrs.  Reiss,  Martin and Sakal stock  purchase  warrants  to acquire  148,000
shares,  140,000 shares and 50,000 shares of Common Stock,  respectively,  at an
exercise price of $1.00 per share.  The terms of these  warrants,  including the
calculation of the number of warrants granted,  were intended to be identical to
the  warrants  issued by the Company in a private  placement  of  $1,100,000  of
Common Stock and warrants closed on June 25, 2001 and described above.

      In addition to  advances to the Company  made by Messrs.  Martin and Reiss
described elsewhere in this section,  Messrs.  Martin and Reiss also advanced to
the Company an aggregate of $380,000  during the course of 2001.  These advances
accrue  interest at an annual  rate of 8%. The  Company  and Messrs.  Martin and
Reiss have not yet agreed on repayment terms.

      Effective  as of December  31,  2001,  Mr.  Martin,  the  Company's  Chief
Executive Officer, exercised 470,066 warrants by agreeing to cancel a portion of
a loan in the  amount of  $70,510  payable by the  Company  to Mr.  Martin.  The
exercised  warrants  were  originally  issued to Mr.  Martin  under  the  salary
deferment program described above.

      Lauren Reiss-Pollard is employed by the Company as a Vice President.  Mrs.
Reiss-Pollard  received cash  compensation  of $78,000 in 2001. Ms. Reiss is the
daughter of Mr. Reiss, a Member of the Company's Office of the President.

      The  Certificate  of  Incorporation  limits the liability of the Company's
directors for monetary  damages arising from a breach of their fiduciary duty as
directors,  except  for any  breach of the  director's  duty of  loyalty  to the
Company or its  stockholders,  for acts or omissions  not in good faith or which
involve  intentional   misconduct  or  a  knowing  violation  of  law,  for  any
transaction from which the director derived an improper  personal benefit and as
otherwise  required by Delaware  General  Corporation  Law.  This  limitation of
liability  does not  limit  equitable  remedies  such as  injunctive  relief  or
rescission.

                                       24



      The  Company's  bylaws  provide  that  the  Company  shall  indemnify  its
directors  and  officers  to the  fullest  extent  permitted  by  Delaware  law,
including in circumstances in which  indemnification is otherwise  discretionary
under Delaware law.

                          COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT

      The Compensation  Committee of the Board of Directors consists entirely of
non-employee  directors,  and its primary function is to make recommendations to
the Board of Directors concerning executive compensation, option grants pursuant
to the Company's 2000 Equity Compensation Plan and 2001 Equity Compensation Plan
and other benefit policies for the Company.

      The Committee believes that the most effective compensation program is one
that provides  executives  competitive  base salaries and  incentives to achieve
both current and long-term strategic business goals of the Company.

      The Company's executive compensation programs are designed to:

      o     Align  the  interests  of  executive  officers  with  the  long-term
            interests of the Company's stockholders.

      o     Motivate and challenge executive officers to achieve both annual and
            long-term strategic business goals.

      o     Support an environment  that rewards  executive  officers based upon
            corporate and individual performance and results.

      o     Attract and retain  executive  officers  critical  to the  long-term
            success of the Company.

      In 2001, the basic components of executive officer compensation  consisted
of base salary and long-term  incentives in the form of stock options.  Although
the Compensation  Committee believes that cash bonuses are typically appropriate
to meet the goals  discussed  above,  the Committee  believed that the Company's
performance in 2001 did not merit such cash bonuses. The executive officers also
participate  in employee  benefit  plans  available  generally to the  Company's
employees.

      Base Salary.  Technology  companies face intense competition for qualified
employees,  and the  Committee  believes  it is  important  that  the  Company's
executive  officer  compensation  levels be  competitive  with other  technology
companies.  The  Committee  reviewed  the  compensation  of  its  executives  in
comparison  with other publicly  traded  technology  companies and targeted base
salary levels to be consistent with comparable positions at these companies.

      Salary  Deferment  Program.  Beginning in November  2000,  in an effort to
conserve  cash,  the Company  established  a salary  deferment  program  whereby
certain executive officers,  including Messrs. Martin, Reiss, Tomaro,  McCormack
and Rozenfeld and Dr.  O'Connell,  and other employees  agreed to defer all or a
portion of their  salaries.  To induce  employees to  participate  in the salary
deferment  program the Company agreed to pay interest at an annual rate of 8% on
the deferred salary. In addition, the Company promised  participating  employees
that they would receive (1) an option to convert  deferred salary into equity on
the  same  basis as  third-party  investors  in the  Company  and (2)  "coverage
warrants" to the extent they were also granted to  third-party  investors  while
participating  employees  were  deferring  pay.  The  Company  ended the  salary
deferment  program on December  31, 2001.  As of December 31, 2001,  the Company
accrued $1,038,876 on account of deferred salaries and interest thereon. Certain
participating employees,  including Messrs. Martin, Reiss, Tomaro, McCormack and
Rozenfeld,  agreed to exchange a total of $814,595 of accrued  salary,  together
with interest thereon,  for warrants to acquire 2,327,415 shares of Common Stock
with an exercise price of $0.15 per share. The number of warrants issued to each
employee  electing to surrender  accrued  salary was  calculated by dividing the
employee's total accrued salary and interest thereon by $0.35.  Accordingly,  if
an employee  elected to exchange accrued salary for warrants and later exercised
these  warrants,  the  effective  per share price for the shares of Common Stock
that the employee  would receive would be $.50.  The price of $.50 per share was
intended to equal the price per share paid by third-party  investors  purchasing
Common Stock in several  private  placements  completed  by I-trax in 2001.  The
Company  also

                                       25



granted the participating  employees warrants to acquire an aggregate of 710,983
shares of Common  Stock at an exercise  price of $.50 per share and  warrants to
acquire an aggregate of 102,073  shares of Common Stock at an aggregate of $1.00
per share.  These extra warrants were issued to all employees that  participated
in the salary  deferment  program  because  similar  warrants were issued by the
Company  to  third-party  investors  in  connection  with  the  several  private
placement completed by the Company in 2001.

      Long-Term Incentives in Form of Stock Options. The Committee believes that
significant  management  ownership of the Company's stock effectively  motivates
the building of stockholder  wealth and aligns the interests of management  with
those of the Company's  stockholders.  During  calendar year 2001, the Company's
executive  officers  received option grants totaling  1,100,000 shares under the
terms of the Company's 2001 Equity  Compensation Plan and 350,000 outside of any
plan.  All such options were granted at per share  exercise  prices equal to the
fair market value of the underlying Common Stock on the date of grant.

      Chief Executive Officer Compensation. The compensation plan for Mr. Martin
for 2001  contained  the same  elements  and  operated in the same manner as the
compensation  plan  described  above  for  the  other  executive  officers.  The
Committee  believes that Mr. Martin's total 2001 compensation was appropriate in
light of his importance to the achievement of the Company's goals.

      During 2001, Mr. Martin was granted  options to acquire  350,000 shares of
Common Stock at $.55 per share,  the fair market value of such stock on the date
of grant.  Mr.  Martin  is a  significant  stockholder  of the  Company  and has
advanced to the Company a significant sum for working capital requirements.  The
Committee believes that Mr. Martin's interests align directly with the Company's
stockholders.  To the extent his performance  translates into an increased value
of Common Stock, all stockholders will benefit.

      Compliance with Internal  Revenue Code Section  162(m).  Section 162(m) of
the Internal  Revenue Code  disallows a tax deduction to publicly held companies
for compensation paid to certain of their executive officers, to the extent that
compensation  exceeds  $1,000,000  per covered  officer in any fiscal year.  The
limitation   applies  only  to  compensation   that  is  not  considered  to  be
performance-based.  Non-performance-based  compensation  paid  to the  Company's
executive officers for 2001 did not exceed the $1,000,000 limit per officer, and
the Committee does not anticipate that the non-performance-based compensation to
be paid to the  Company's  executive  officers  in the  foreseeable  future will
exceed that limit.

                      Members of the Compensation Committee
                      David R. Bock
                      Craig Jones, M.D.

           COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

      The Compensation Committee was formed in February 2000, and the members of
the  Compensation  Committee  are Dr.  Jones  and Mr.  Bock.  Neither  of  these
individuals was at any time during fiscal 2001, or at any other time, an officer
or employee of the  Company.  No  executive  officer of the Company  serves as a
member of the board of  directors or  compensation  committee of any entity that
has one or more executive officers serving as a member of the Company's Board of
Directors or Compensation Committee.

                                       26



                             AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

      The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors developed an updated charter
for the  Committee in 2000,  which was approved by the full Board.  The complete
text of the new charter is reproduced in Exhibit A to this Proxy Statement.

      The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors  recommends to the Board the
accounting firm to be retained to audit the Company's financial  statements and,
once retained,  consults with and reviews recommendations made by the accounting
firm with respect to financial  statements,  financial  records,  and  financial
controls of the Company.

      Accordingly,  the Audit  Committee  has (a)  reviewed  and  discussed  the
audited   financial    statements   with   management;    (b)   discussed   with
PricewaterhouseCoopers,  LLP, the Company's  independent  auditors,  the matters
required  to  be  discussed  by   Statement   on  Auditing   Standards   No.  61
(Communications with Audit Committees); (c) received the written disclosures and
the letter from  PricewaterhouseCoopers,  LLP required by Independence Standards
Board Standard No. 1 (Independence  Discussions with Audit Committees);  and (d)
discussed with PricewaterhouseCoopers,  LLP its independence from management and
the Company,  including the matters in the written  disclosures  required by the
Independence   Standards   Board.   The  Audit  Committee  also  discussed  with
PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP the overall scope and plans for its audit. The Audit
Committee met with  management  and  PricewaterhouseCoopers,  LLP to discuss the
results  of the  auditors'  examinations,  their  evaluations  of the  Company's
internal controls, and the overall quality of the Company's financial reporting.

      In reliance  on the review and  discussions  referred to above,  the Audit
Committee  recommended  to the Board of  Directors  that the  audited  financial
statements  be included in the  Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-KSB for the
year ended December 31, 2001.

      This report of the Audit Committee does not constitute soliciting material
and should  not be deemed  filed or  incorporated  by  reference  into any other
I-trax or Health Management filing under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
or the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended,  except to the extent that
I-trax specifically incorporates this report by reference therein.

                      Members of the Audit Committee
                      William S. Wheeler, Chairman
                      David R. Bock
                      John R. Palumbo

                                   FORM 10-KSB

      The Company will mail without charge,  upon written request, a copy of the
Company's Form 10-KSB Report for fiscal year ended December 31, 2001,  including
its financial  statements.  Requests  should be sent to I-trax,  Inc., One Logan
Square, Suite 2615, 130 N. 18th Street, Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania 19103, Attn:
Corporate Secretary.

                  STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 2003 ANNUAL MEETING

      Stockholders who intend to have a proposal considered for inclusion in the
Company's proxy materials for  presentation at the Company's 2003 annual meeting
of  stockholders  pursuant to Rule 14a-8 under the  Exchange Act must submit the
proposal to the Company at its offices at One Logan Square,  Suite 2615,  130 N.
18th Street,  Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania 19103, Attn: Yuri Rozenfeld, not later
than  January 21,  2003.  Stockholders  who intend to present a proposal at such
meeting  without  inclusion of such  proposal in the Company's  proxy  materials
pursuant to Rule 14a-8 under the Exchange  Act are  required to provide  advance
notice of such proposal to the Company at the  aforementioned  address not later
than January 21,  2003.  The Company  reserves the right to reject,  rule out of
order, or take other  appropriate  action with respect to any proposal that does
not comply with these and other applicable  requirements,  including  conditions
established by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

                                       27



                                  OTHER MATTERS

      The Board of  Directors  knows of no other  matters  to be  presented  for
stockholder action at the Annual Meeting.  However, if other matters do properly
come before the Annual Meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof, the
Board of Directors  intends that the persons named in the proxies will vote upon
such matters in accordance with their best judgment.



                                       28



                                    EXHIBIT A

                                  I-TRAX, INC.

                             Audit Committee Charter

Role

      The Audit  Committee of the Board of Directors shall be responsible to the
Board of Directors for oversight of the quality and integrity of the accounting,
auditing,  and  reporting  practices of the Company and shall perform such other
duties as may be directed by the Board.  The Committee  shall  maintain free and
open communication with the Company's independent auditors and management of the
Company and shall meet in executive  session at least  annually.  In discharging
this  oversight  role,  the  Committee is empowered  to  investigate  any matter
brought to its  attention,  with full power to retain  outside  counsel or other
experts for this purpose.

Membership and Independence

      The membership of the Committee  shall consist of at least three directors
who are generally knowledgeable in financial and auditing matters,  including at
least one member with accounting or related financial management expertise. Each
member  shall be free of any  relationship  that,  in the  opinion of the Board,
would interfere with his or her individual exercise of independent judgment, and
shall  meet  the  director  independence   requirements  for  serving  on  audit
committees  as set forth in the  American  Stock  Exchange's  listing  standards
applicable to companies with  securities  traded on The American Stock Exchange.
The Chairperson of the Audit  Committee,  who shall be appointed by the Board of
Directors,  shall be  responsible  for  leadership of the  Committee,  including
preparing agendas for and presiding over meetings,  making Committee assignments
and  reporting to the Board of  Directors.  The  chairperson  will also maintain
regular liaison with the Chief Executive  Officer and Chief Financial Officer of
the Company and the lead independent audit partner.

Responsibilities

      Internal Control

      o     Discuss with management and the independent auditors the quality and
            adequacy of the  Company's  computer  systems (and their  security),
            internal accounting controls and personnel.

      o     Review with the  independent  auditors and management any management
            letter issued by the independent auditors and management's responses
            thereto.

      Financial Reporting

      o     Keep informed of important new  pronouncements  from the  accounting
            profession and other regulatory bodies, as well as other significant
            accounting  and  reporting  issues,  that may have an  impact on the
            Company's accounting policies and/or financial statements.

      o     Review the audited financial statements and management's  discussion
            and analysis of financial  condition and results of  operations  and
            discuss them with  management and the  independent  auditors.  These
            discussions  shall  include  consideration  of  the  quality  of the
            Company's  accounting  policies  and  principles  as  applied in its
            financial  reporting,  including  review of estimates,  reserves and
            accruals,  review of judgment  areas,  review of audit  adjustments,
            whether  or  not  recorded,  and  such  other  inquiries  as  may be
            appropriate.  Based  on  the  review,  the  Committee  shall  make a
            recommendation  to the Board as to the  inclusion  of the  Company's
            audited financial  statements in the Company's annual report on Form
            10-KSB.

                                      A-1




      External Audit

      o     Review the performance of the independent  auditors and recommend to
            the  Board  the  independent  auditors  to be  engaged  to audit the
            financial  statements  of  the  Company  and,  if  appropriate,  the
            termination  of that  relationship.  In doing so, the Committee will
            request  from the auditors a written  affirmation  that the auditors
            are independent,  discuss with the auditors any  relationships  that
            may  impact  the   auditors'   independence   (including   non-audit
            services),  and  recommend  to the Board any  actions  necessary  to
            oversee the auditors' independence.

      o     Oversee the independent auditors relationship by discussing with the
            independent  auditors  the  nature,  scope  and  rigor of the  audit
            process,  receiving and reviewing  audit reports,  and providing the
            auditors full access to the  Committee  (and the Board) to report on
            appropriate matters.

      Reporting to Board of Directors

      o     Report  Audit  Committee  activities  to the full  Board  and  issue
            annually a report (including  appropriate oversight  conclusions) to
            be included in the Company's  proxy statement for its annual meeting
            of shareholders.

      o     Review  the Audit  Committee  Charter  with the  Board of  Directors
            annually.


                                      A-2



                                    EXHIBIT B

                            CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT
                                       OF
                          CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
                                       OF
                                  I-TRAX, INC.

      I-trax, Inc., a corporation  organized and existing under and by virtue of
the  Section 242 of the General  Corporation  Law of the State of Delaware  (the
"Corporation"),

      DOES HEREBY CERTIFY:

      FIRST:  That the Board of Directors  adopted a resolution  setting forth a
proposed amendment to the Amended Certificate of Corporation of said Corporation
and declaring  said  amendment  advisable and directing  that said  amendment be
submitted to the  stockholders of said  Corporation  entitled to vote in respect
thereof for their  approval.  The resolution  setting forth said amendment is as
follows:

      RESOLVED,  that the  FOURTH  Article  shall be  amended to read in full as
follows:

            "FOURTH:  The total number of shares of stock which the  Corporation
      shall  have  authority  to  issue is  102,000,000  shares,  of  which  (i)
      100,000,000  shares are  designated as Common Stock,  $0.001 par value per
      share, and (ii) 2,000,000 shares are designated as Preferred Stock, $0.001
      par value per share.

            The  Board  of  Directors  of  the  Corporation  is  authorized,  by
      resolution or resolutions and subject to limitations prescribed by law and
      the  provisions  of this  Article  FOURTH,  to provide for the issuance of
      shares of Preferred Stock, in one or more series or class,  and, by filing
      a statement  pursuant  to the  General  Corporation  Law of  Delaware,  to
      establish  from time to time the number of shares to be  included  in each
      such series or class and to fix the designations,  powers, preferences and
      rights of the shares of each such series or class and the  qualifications,
      limitations or restrictions thereof..

            Effective  as of 5:00 p.m.,  Eastern  time,  on  ____________,  2002
      ("Effective  Time"),  each  one (1)  share  of  Common  Stock  issued  and
      outstanding   prior  to  the  Effective   Time  shall  be  and  is  hereby
      automatically  reclassified  and changed  (without  any further  act) into
      [one-third  (1/3rd)]   [one-fourth   (1/4th)]  [one-fifth  (1/5th)]  of  a
      fully-paid and nonassessable  share of Common Stock without  increasing or
      decreasing  the  amount  of  stated  capital  or  paid in  surplus  of the
      Corporation,  provided  that no  fractional  shares  shall be  issued  and
      instead of issuing such fractional  shares,  the Corporation  shall pay in
      cash the fair value of such fractions of a share as of the Effective Time.

      SECOND: That thereafter said amendment was duly adopted in accordance with
the  provisions of Sections 242 of the General  Corporation  Law of the State of
Delaware.

      IN WITNESS  WHEREOF,  the  Corporation  has caused this  certificate to be
signed by its Chief Executive Officer this ___ day of _____________ 2002.

                                              I-TRAX, INC.



                                              By:  ________________________
                                                       Frank A. Martin
                                                       Chief Executive Officer

                                      B-1


PROXY                            I-TRAX, INC.                              PROXY
    One Logan Square, Suite 2615, 130 N. 18th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103

   This Proxy is Solicited on Behalf of the Board of Directors of I-trax, Inc.
         for the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held May 22, 2002

      The undersigned  holder of Common Stock, par value $.001, of I-trax,  Inc.
(the  "Company")  hereby  appoints Frank A. Martin and Gary Reiss,  or either of
them,  proxies for the  undersigned,  each with full power of  substitution,  to
represent and to vote as specified in this Proxy all Common Stock of the Company
that the undersigned stockholder would be entitled to vote if personally present
at the Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  (the  "Annual  Meeting")  to be held on
Wednesday,  May 22, 2002 at 10:00 a.m. local time, at 1735 Market  Street,  51st
Floor, Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania,  and at any adjournments or postponements of
the Annual  Meeting.  The  undersigned  stockholder  hereby revokes any proxy or
proxies heretofore executed for such matters.

      This  proxy,  when  properly  executed,  will be  voted in the  manner  as
directed  herein by the undersigned  stockholder.  IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, THIS
PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR THE ELECTION OF THE DIRECTORS, FOR PROPOSALS 2, 3, 4 AND
5, AND, IN THE  DISCRETION OF THE  DESIGNATED  PROXIES,  AS TO ANY OTHER MATTERS
THAT MAY  PROPERLY  COME BEFORE THE MEETING.  The  undersigned  stockholder  may
revoke this proxy at any time before it is voted by  delivering to the Secretary
of the Company either a written revocation of the proxy or a duly executed proxy
bearing a later  date,  or by  appearing  at the  Annual  Meeting  and voting in
person.

      THE  BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE  "FOR"  THE  ELECTION  OF THE
DIRECTORS AND "FOR" PROPOSALS 2, 3, 4 AND 5.

      PLEASE MARK,  SIGN,  DATE AND RETURN THIS CARD PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED
RETURN ENVELOPE. If you receive more than one proxy card, please sign and return
ALL cards in the enclosed envelope.

                  (CONTINUED AND TO BE SIGNED ON REVERSE SIDE)





(Reverse)                                                                            /x/   Please mark votes as in this example


                                       
1.  To elect the following directors      Nominees: John Blazek, David R.       FOR    AGAINST          For all nominees, except
    to serve for a term ending upon       Bock, Philip D. Green, Michael       /  /     /  /            for nominees written below.
    the 2003 Annual Meeting of            M.E. Johns, M.D., Craig Jones,                                 /  /
    Stockholders or until their           M.D., Hans C. Kastensmith, Arthur                             ---------------------------
    successors are elected and            N. Leibowitz, M.D., Frank A.                                  ---------------------------
    qualified:                            Martin, John R. Palumbo, Carol                                ---------------------------
                                          Rehtmeyer, and William S. Wheeler                             Nominee exception(s).

2.  Directors' Proposal - Approval of an amendment to the Certificate of        FOR    AGAINST          ABSTAIN
    Incorporation to authorize a reverse 1-for-3 stock split, as set forth     /  /     /  /             /  /
    in the accompanying Proxy Statement

3   Directors' Proposal - Approval of an amendment to the Certificate of        FOR    AGAINST          ABSTAIN
    Incorporation to authorize a reverse 1-for-4 stock split, as set forth     /  /     /  /             /  /
    in the accompanying Proxy Statement

4   Directors' Proposal - Approval of an amendment to the Certificate of        FOR    AGAINST          ABSTAIN
    Incorporation to authorize a reverse 1-for-5 stock split, as set forth     /  /     /  /             /  /
    in the accompanying Proxy Statement

5.  To ratify the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the Company's    FOR    AGAINST          ABSTAIN
    independent auditors for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2002          /  /     /  /             /  /


      In their  discretion,  the proxies are  authorized to vote upon such other
business as may properly come before the Annual Meeting.

                                        The undersigned acknowledges receipt of the accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting of
                                        Stockholders and Proxy Statement.

                                        -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        Signature

                                        -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        Signature (if held jointly):

                                        Date:                                                      , 2002
                                             -----------------------------------------------------


                                        When shares are held by joint tenants, both should sign. If signing as attorney, executor,
                                        administrator, trustee, guardian, custodian, corporate official or in any other fiduciary or
                                        representative capacity, please give your full title as such.

Please sign your name exactly as it appears on this proxy, and mark, date and return this proxy as soon as possible in the
enclosed envelope.